A new study, however, proves that the evolution of the giraffe’s neck came in several stages. First, the neck vertebrae reached into the mammal’s neck, and millions of years later, the vertebrae extended to the tail.
This is the first time the scientific world is given fact on the transformation of the giraffe’s ancestors.
The research, led by palaeontologist at the College of Osteopathic Medicine at MIT and giraffe anatomy expert Nikos Solounas, reveals that the evolution of the giraffe has not been consistent.
The third vertebra of the giraffe began elongating in one cluster of the animal’s species. After millions of years, the …show more content…
The fossils date back to the late 1800s-1900s, and were borrowed from museums in Greece, Germany, Kenya, Sweden, Austria and England. The team discovered started before the giraffe family came to be; the oldest giraffe fossil had already developed an elongated neck. With closer inspection of the fossil’s anatomy, it was revealed that the frontal part of the C3 vertebrae first began to extend 7 million years ago with the giraffe’s extinct forefathers called Samotherium, and the elongation of the back part of the vertebrae happened one million years ago.
The most fascinating part of this revelation is that while the giraffe’s neck elongated over time, another member of its family had its neck shorten. The okapi, a Central African cousin of the giraffe, has what researchers found as a ‘secondarily shortened neck’, which leads Solounias and his team to believe that the okapi are on an entirely different evolutionary path than the modern