The oldest big cat fossils of a previously unknown species Panthera blytheae, similar to a snow leopard, have been unearthed in the Himalayas. The new fossils were dug up on an expedition in 2010 in the remote Zanda Basin in southwestern Tibet, by a team including Dr. Tseng and his wife Juan Liu.
They found over 100 bones deposited by a river eroding out of a cliff, including the crushed - but largely complete - remains of a big cat skull. Among the bones were seven skull fragments, belonging to at least three individual cats, including one nearly complete skull. The fragments dated using magnetostratigraphy, ranged between 4.10 and 5.95 million years old, the complete skull being around 4.4 million years of age.
The so-called "big cats" - the Pantherinae subfamily - includes lions, jaguars, tigers, leopards, snow leopards, and clouded leopards. DNA evidence suggests they diverged from their cousins the Felinae - which includes cougars, lynxes, and domestic cats - about 6.37 million years ago. The earliest fossils previously found were just 3.6 million years old - tooth fragments uncovered at Laetoli in Tanzania, the famous hominin site excavated by Mary Leakeyin the 1970s.
Their discovery in Tibet supports the theory that big cats evolved in central Asia - not Africa - and spread outward.
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