Rainforest frogs preserved in Amber surface after 100m years
BEIJING -- Scientists from China and the United States have found frogs around 100 million years old preserved in amber, the earliest frogs ever found in amber.
The specimens were excavated in Myanmar between 2015 and 2016 and are well preserved.
"One of the frogs is around 2.2 cm long and its skull, part of its backbone and most of its limbs are preserved," said Xing Lida of the China University of Geosciences in Beijing, co-author of a paper recently published by Scientific Reports.
Co-author David C. Blackburn of Florida Museum of Natural History, said, "The frogs are tiny. They lived in wet tropical forests in northern Myanmar. Unluckily, they were trapped by tree resin which formed into amber."
Xing said it was the first time that frog traces had been found in rainforests from the Cretaceous period.
"The diversity of frog habitat during the period is beyond our expectations," he said.
Frogs in amber are quite rare. Previous examples found in the Dominican Republic and Mexico date back only 20 million - 30 million years.
- Ten keywords to highlight China's carbon reduction progress in 2025
- Sichuan breaks 100-m-kw mark in hydropower installed capacity
- 3 killed, 1 injured in South China knife attack
- Taiwan opposition lawmakers announce plan to impeach Lai Ching-te
- Half marathon route along Suzhou Creek in Putuo
- People across China hold diverse events to mark Winter Solstice































