Cricket fossil used to revive ancient music

Scientists have recreated what they claim is the world’s most ancient known music — the crooning of a prehistoric cricket, thanks to a fossil found in China.
An international team, led by Bristol University, has used the exquisitely preserved, fossilised rema-ins of the extinct Jurassic bush cricket, which lived 165 million years ago, to recreate its chirp.
The song, possibly documented to date, was reconstructed from microscopic wing features on a fossil of the cricket — Archaboilus musicus — discovered in North East China, say the scientists behind the work.
“This is one of the oldest mating calls ever reconstructed from a fossil,” Fernando Montealegre Zapata, who led the team, was quoted by the Guardian as saying.
In its research, the team examined the anatomical construction of the fossil’s song apparatus, and compared it to 59 living bushcricket species. They concluded this insect must’ve produced musical songs, broadcasting pure frequencies. “This discovery indicates that pure tone communication was already exploited by animals in the middle Jurassic 165 million years ago.”

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As a self-confessed hardliner, I must admit that being a part of the team engaged in Indo-Pak Track 2 dialogue has been very interesting.

In June 2012, world leaders along with thousands of participants from governments, NGOs and environmental groups as well as the private sector will come together in Rio de Janeiro in Brazil for Rio+20