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Two small holes in the back of a blood-engorged tick, which allowed blood to ooze out just as the tick became stuck in tree sap that later fossilized into amber, provide a brief glimpse of life in a tropical jungle millions of years ago in what is now the Dominican Republic.
“These two tiny holes indicate that something picked a tick off the mammal it was feeding on, puncturing it in the process and dropping it immediately into tree sap,” said George Poinar, Jr., professor emeritus in the College of Science at Oregon State University, author of the study and an international expert on plant and animal life forms found preserved in amber.
“This would be consistent with the grooming behavior of monkeys that we know lived at that time in this region. The fossilized blood cells, infected with these parasites, are simply amazing in their detail. This discovery provides the only known fossils of Babesia-type pathogens.”
Part of what makes these fossils unique, Poinar said, is the clarity by which the parasites and blood cells are preserved, almost as if they had been stained and otherwise treated in a laboratory for inspection. The parasites were different enough in texture and density to stand out clearly within the red blood cells during the natural embalming process for which amber is famous.
oregonstate.edu...
originally posted by: gortex
About 30 million years ago two monkeys sat grooming each other in a tree , a Tic was discovered removed and dropped to the ground but before it could hit the ground it landed in tree sap , 30 million years later the Tick has reemerged to be described as a "remarkable new find" encased in an amber time capsule.
In itself the Tic is unremarkable but its removal by the grooming monkey punctured the Tic's body so exposing its freshly obtained blood meal giving us the first Red Blood Cells from a Mammal living in prehistoric times.
Picture of the engorged Tic with the exposed blood on its back.
Two small holes in the back of a blood-engorged tick, which allowed blood to ooze out just as the tick became stuck in tree sap that later fossilized into amber, provide a brief glimpse of life in a tropical jungle millions of years ago in what is now the Dominican Republic.
“These two tiny holes indicate that something picked a tick off the mammal it was feeding on, puncturing it in the process and dropping it immediately into tree sap,” said George Poinar, Jr., professor emeritus in the College of Science at Oregon State University, author of the study and an international expert on plant and animal life forms found preserved in amber.
“This would be consistent with the grooming behavior of monkeys that we know lived at that time in this region. The fossilized blood cells, infected with these parasites, are simply amazing in their detail. This discovery provides the only known fossils of Babesia-type pathogens.”
Close up of the 30 million year old blood cells
Part of what makes these fossils unique, Poinar said, is the clarity by which the parasites and blood cells are preserved, almost as if they had been stained and otherwise treated in a laboratory for inspection. The parasites were different enough in texture and density to stand out clearly within the red blood cells during the natural embalming process for which amber is famous.
oregonstate.edu...
It's a moment in time captured by nature as a gift to the future.
originally posted by: gortex
a reply to: Vasa Croe
George Poinar says it's consistent with the grooming , don't know if there's evidence for that but I suppose it explains how the Tic came to be in the amber with the two puncture in its body.
I think it's a likely scenario.