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Vertebrates

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The Hall of Vertebrate Origins at the American Museum of Natural History is an impressive collection of fossils and specimens which allow the visitor to see parallel structures such as wings and flippers evolve over time. While the inner architecture of the ear is often hidden from view, we can recognize that the environmental pressure to develop them is present across different habitats, and the investment to develop them in terms of biological resources is relatively low.

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Uploaded on
March 9, 2025
Number of pages
4
Written in
2022/2023
Type
Essay
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A

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The Hall of Vertebrate Origins at the American Museum of Natural History is an

impressive collection of fossils and specimens which allow the visitor to see parallel structures

such as wings and flippers evolve over time. While the inner architecture of the ear is often

hidden from view, we can recognize that the environmental pressure to develop them is present

across different habitats, and the investment to develop them in terms of biological resources is

relatively low. Further, vocalizations can be used for a variety of uses such as communication or

mating (Manley 2010). Middle ear structures are excellent features to perform comparative

anatomy on. They assist with the transmission of auditory vibrations to the inner ear, and their

bones can be seen to exhibit evolutionary change. Recently, the exploration of gene expression

also allows for the further understanding of structural origins.

The flat, primitive head of Buettneria is on display in the hall. Buettneria’s auditory

organs are located behind its cheekbones, where it contains semicircular embayments. These are

clearly precursors to amphibian eardrums (Damiani 2001). Buettneria and other temnospondyls

like it were in possession of a small columella that was able to function as a middle ear as well as

a large otic notch (Manley 2010). This single bone connects the inner ear to the eardrum. There

are many indications that the middle ear-precursors of Buettneria are homoplastic, since the

precursors of lepidosaurs and archosaurs were totally lacking a middle ear structure (Manley and

Clack 2004).

In mammals, we can see that the same avenue is arrived at through different means,

namely the repurposing of the articular and quadrate mandible bones. These became not a single

middle ear, but rather three ossicles known as the malleus, the incus, and the stapes. However,

the former two bones are homologus to reptilian structures, and the evidence can be found in

both the fossil record and also in developing fetuses (Bowler 1996). However, Manley claims a
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