A tiny dinosaur relative named the "Antarctic King" has been discovered at the South Pole
- Paleontologists have unearthed a new dinosaur relative in the rocks near the South Pole.
- They named it Antarctanax shackletoni, or "Antarctic king."
- It was a carnivorous reptile about the size of an iguana that lived roughly 250 million years ago.
- The fossil gives scientists new insight into what Antarctica (and the rest of the world) looked like during the time after a mass extinction.
The Antarctica of 250 million years ago was a far cry from today's icy landscape.
At the time, the continent boasted a warm environment, forests, rivers, and plenty of fauna. One of those ancient creatures, scientists just learned, was a carnivorous reptile now known as the "Antarctic king."
Roughly the size of an iguana, Antarctanax shackletoni - Antarctanax being Greek for "Antarctic king" - was an archosaur, an early relative of crocodiles and the dinosaurs.
Finding a new dinosaur relative is exciting on its own, but the discovery of the "Antarctic king" is also significant because it helps scientists understand how archosaurs and their crocodile descendants repopulated the world after a mass die-off.
"The rocks that are preserved in Antarctica are showing us a window of time just after the Earth's largest mass extinction," Brandon Peecock, a researcher at the Field Museum in Chicago who's part of the team that discovered Antarctanax, told Business Insider.
He's referring to what's known as the end-Permian mass extinction event, or the "Great Dying," which took place 252 million years ago. Roughly 90% of the Earth's species were wiped out in that extinction; it far eclipsed the cataclysm that killed the last of the dinosaurs some 187 million years later. Less than 5% of marine species survived, and only one-third of land animal species lived, according to National Geographic.
Researchers initially thought that it took tens of millions of years for diverse species to repopulate the planet in the wake of the "Great Dying." But the "Antarctic king," which lived a mere 2 million years after the die-off, bucks that idea.
A 4-foot-long insectivore
The skeleton that Peecock and his colleagues found was only a partial one, but the vertebrae and foot bones had enough distinctive characteristics for scientists to conclude they'd discovered a new archosaur species.
At the time Antarctanax lived, temperatures in Antarctica rarely dipped below freezing. (The continent froze over much later, around 30 million years ago.)
The reptile was about 4 to 5 feet long, and ate bugs, early mammals, and amphibians.
"We think it's an insectivore because of its body size," Peecock said. "We didn't find any teeth, but all of Antarctanax's relatives were carnivorous at the time, so we're pretty confident."
Digging for fossils at the bottom of the world
Antarctanax shackletoni's name is in part an homage to British polar explorer Ernest Shackleton, who led multiple Antarctic expeditions in the early 1900s.
But Antarctica isn't a locale typically associated with digging for fossils.
"To find fossils, you need rocks," Peecock said. "The only two places with rocks in Antarctica are islands on the coast, and way in the middle where they're poking out of the glacier."
Peecock and the rest of the team helicoptered to the Fremouw Formation of the Transantarctic Mountains, which bisect the continent, to search for ancient creatures.
"We knew where to look because scientists and geologists have have found bits of bone and other Triassic-aged fossils there since the late 1960s," he said.
There, close to the South Pole, they used diamond-bladed rock saws to cleave through the hard rock, and uncovered Antarctanax's skeleton.
Window into a mass extinction
The "Antarctic king" fossil can tell paleontologists a lot about what the Earth was like at the beginning of the Triassic - the geologic period from 251 to 199 million years ago that included the rise of the dinosaurs. Tyrannosaurus rex didn't arrive on the scene for another 185 million years, but the Triassic set the stage for Earth's repopulation after the "Great Dying."
"What paleontologists have come to learn over the past 20 years is how rapidly crocodiles and their cousins radiated out after that extinction," Peecock said.
The Antarctanax finding supports the idea that Antarctica was a hot bed of evolution and species diversification after that major die-off.
"Before the mass extinction, archosaurs were only found around the equator, but after it, they were everywhere," Peecock said in a release.
Peecock thinks fossils like Antarctanax, and what they tell us about life after a mass extinction, should be of interest today, given that many scientists think the world is currently in the middle of a 6th mass extinction.
A 2017 study noted that animal populations planetwide are currently declining so rapidly that a process of "biological annihilation" is occurring. The authors estimated that "as much as 50% of the number of animal individuals that once shared Earth with us are already gone."
This trend of accelerated, widespread population extinctions, author Elizabeth Kolbert wrote, is comparable to mass extinction events like the "Great Dying."
"The extinction at end of the Permian came with conditions that are similar to what were doing to the atmosphere and oceans today," Peecock said.
But threats of scary mass extinctions aside, Peecock said, "the other thing that makes this whole thing awesome is that it's from Antarctica."
He added, "Antarctica is one of those places on Earth, like the bottom of the sea, where we're still in the very early stages of exploration. Antarctanax is our little part of discovering the history of Antarctica."