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A lilliputian penguin that waddled , float and dove around the coast of southern New Zealand 24 million years ago is " central " to deciphering how livingpenguinsgot their wing , a new study finds .
Researchers first unearth fossil of the 1 - human foot - tall ( 0.3 time ) penguin back in the 1980s , but it has been an evolutionary riddle for decades , despite being one of the smallest penguins ever discovered .

An artist reconstruction of Pakudyptes, which is one of the smallest penguins on record.
A squad has now re - analyse the fossils and found they go to a previously unidentified species calledPakudyptes hakataramea . Pakudyptescombines the Māori word " paku , " meaning " small " with the Hellenic password " dyptes , " meaning " diver , " according to the research worker ’s discipline published Wednesday ( July 31 ) in theJournal of the Royal Society of New Zealand .
The newly described species plugs an significant gap in penguin wing phylogenesis because its shoulder joints are very similar to those of present - day penguins , while its elbow roast are very standardized to out penguin .
" Pakudyptesis the first fossil penguin ever rule with this combining , and it is the ' cardinal ' fossil to unlock the phylogeny of penguin wings , " study lead authorTatsuro Ando , a curator at Ashoro Museum of Paleontology in Japan , said in astatement .

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With a standing height of around 11.8 to 13.8 inches ( 30 to 35 centimeters),P. hakatarameawas about the same size as the smallest living penguin — little blue penguin ( Eudyptula minor ) — and thesmallest extinct penguins — Wilson ’s little penguin ( Eudyptula wilsonae ) .
TheP. hakatarameafossils consist of three bones collected from the Hakataramea Quarry in South Canterbury in 1987 . The team usedcomputed imaging ( CT ) scannersto create a virtual , 3D image of the remains and then compared them to those of living penguins , which allowed the researchers to at last set this new coinage on the tree diagram of life history .

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P. hakatarameahad slow bones like live penguins , which would have been suited for swim and diving , according to the study . The hollow part of the bones — the medullary cavity — was also similar to little low penguin , which typically expend sentence in shallow waters , so it may have done the same .
Most dodo penguin are large , at around 3.3 fundament ( 1 m ) , so this tiny penguin also helps researcher learn more about how penguin diversified between when it was alive at the end of the Oligocene epoch ( 33.9 million to 23.03 million twelvemonth ago ) and the beginning of the Miocene epoch ( 23.03 million to 5.3 million long time ago ) .
" Penguins evolved rapidly from the belated Oligocene to Early Miocene and Pakudyptes is an important fogey from this geological period , " subject co - authorCarolina Loch , a senior lecturer in the section of oral sciences at the University of Otago , said in the financial statement . " Its low size and unique combination of bones may have contribute to the ecologic multifariousness of modern penguins . "















