You can’t just say that and not link a source talking about this mammal.
Say it again, Dexter
Submitted 4 weeks ago by fossilesque@mander.xyz to science_memes@mander.xyz
https://mander.xyz/pictrs/image/080c0172-4238-429d-b809-0de4587d45b7.jpeg
Comments
Pirky@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
TheTechnician27@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
Found a real source: www.nature.com/articles/s41598-024-79546-1
Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
Discover mahazine found an unrelated but no less real source.
burgersc12@mander.xyz 4 weeks ago
It’s like a lion, but different. Is this surprising to anyone? I thought we had a decent idea of what sabretooths looked like before this
kerrigan778@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
Kolanaki@yiffit.net 4 weeks ago
Oh shit, is that a fucking tribble?
mexicancartel@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 weeks ago
Barbie Ben 10?
Bluefalcon@discuss.tchncs.de 4 weeks ago
Jake has already challenged the cub to netflix’s next match.
Mothra@mander.xyz 4 weeks ago
Anyone knows which Dexter episode is this from? I loved the show, but I can’t recall seeing this one.
NeatoBuilds@mander.xyz 4 weeks ago
Omelette Du Fromage
the big cheese
SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de 4 weeks ago
For me it’s burned into my brain. And I haven’t watched it in over 25 years
I can hear their voices in my head
propter_hog@hexbear.net 4 weeks ago
“Omelette du fromage”
Evil_Shrubbery@lemm.ee 4 weeks ago
Same.
Also still mystified by what women like to hear like that.
mobius_slip@beehaw.org 4 weeks ago
Please link the story
kerrigan778@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
No it’s Barbi Benton
Soup@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
For someone who doesn’t know much about this but has been watching a tonne of Youtube this doesn’t make a lot of sense and I could use some help.
Like, we’ve found mammals halfway between leggy land-bois and frickin’ whales but this thing that’s largely just a lion cub with mods is somehow special and different? I was expecting some absolutely wild and got a cat.
I tried reading through some stuff but I don’t have the skill to read through the source efficiently.
anarchrist@lemmy.dbzer0.com 4 weeks ago
Not a scientist, but I think the BFD is that it’s 30k years old from a completely extinct branch of animals (unlike mammoths which are closely related to modern elephants) and the thing they found was a frozen tundra mummy not a fossil so it has soft tissue and stuff unlike other extinct animals we typically observe via fossils like dinosaurs
F04118F@feddit.nl 4 weeks ago
I think this image on the Felidae wiki sums it up pretty well: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Felidae#Phylogeny
Image
Note that everything in this graph is extinct, except the 2 circled subfamilies at the bottom.
Mothra@mander.xyz 4 weeks ago
That’s an understandable take and the use of the word analogue is the key issue. It also left me stumped for a while, because as you have already pointed out, there are plenty of modern day analogues to Homotherium…
…but that depends on what counts as an analogue in this particular context. Biologically speaking, the word can be used to fit a broad range of criteria. So you could say their modern day analogues are lynxes or snow leopards, and fair enough, that would be a good enough use of the word because these animals do share a lot in common, physically and in their ecological roles too. Large catlike mammal that hunts down larger herbivore mammals in a tundra environment.
But Homotherium had some very specific traits that have no modern day analogues. The large canine teeth is the most obvious. Those large teeth also meant a specialized hunting method and technique for which we have nothing alive today to base it off of. They also had a different body build, with shorter rear limbs, so now your cat looks a bit more like a bear or a hyena in its stance and gait. And if I’m understanding what I’m reading correctly, they also had cardiovascular adaptations for endurance running, and their claws and paws were not as retractable and supple as that of cats.
So yes they were like cats and you can point at living analogues for a lot of these adaptations ( bears, hyenas, cats, any mammal with good cardio, etc) but when you put all that together and add the teeth and the behavior modifications those teeth imply then you have, as a whole, an animal with no current living analogues. Yes, it can sound pedantic but that’s science for you and I think it’s important to remark that the quote is taken directly from the paper published. The journalists loved the buzz emanating from the word “analogue” so much they kept it in the non scientific publications, they didn’t paraphrase, and they didn’t bother explaining exactly what it meant because, well, that’s precisely why they chose to keep the quote.
yesman@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
The problem with biology is that it attracts too many cool people. Especially those marine biologists studding sharks and shit. That’s why taxonomy is one of the refuges for real pedantics and nerds. No danger of running into anybody with a tan in that department.
lunarul@lemmy.world 4 weeks ago
But is this cub the first time in history those types of features have been studied? We’ve known about saber-toothed cats for decades.