Prehistoric birds discovered in Saskatchewan
Scientists have discovered the fossils of a new species of prehistoric birds with a Saskatchewan connection.
“They most likely had teeth and probably still had the ability to fly … up until now we weren't certain about the diversity of birds before the extinction 65 million years ago,” said Tim Tokaryk, a curator of palaeontology with the Royal Saskatchewan Museum.
Tokaryk is one of the authors of a paper published in the journal Palaeoworld about the loon-like, toothed, aquatic birds, Brodavis americanus that were uncovered in Saskatchewan's Grasslands National Park.
The birds lived about 65 million years ago in a southwest Saskatchewan environment, which back then was more like south Florida, said Tokaryk.


