Restoration of 'love song' from Jurassic

The love song of an extinct grasshopper species from 165 million years ago has been successfully restored by scientists.

The love song of an extinct grasshopper species from 165 million years ago has been successfully restored by scientists.

This is considered the oldest piece of music ever known and recorded so far, Discovery News said. It is reconstructed from the wing features of a grasshopper fossil found in northeastern China. For the first time, we can hear the sounds that dinosaurs and prehistoric creatures can hear in the night forest.

Picture 1 of Restoration of 'love song' from Jurassic

Scientists have successfully reconstructed a "love song" of Jurassic

According to paleontologists Jun-Jie Gu and Dong Ren of Beijing Capital Normal University, grasshoppers make sounds that call you by brushing your teeth on one side of the wing and rubbing the tail into the other. However is that the way their ancestors made sound? What does an ancient grasshopper melody sound like? Those are still unknowns that have not been solved, until before this study.

Jun-Jie Gu and Dong Ren asked the help of two entomology experts from the University of England and a leading expert on insect evolution in the United States when analyzing a conserved grasshopper fossil intact from the middle of the Jurassic period.'We named the grasshopper species Archaboilos Musicus and they became extinct 165 million years ago.'

They found that, right from that time, this grasshopper produced a clear, loud, loud sound and on a single frequency to call you. It is a message that helps 'advertise' the form, quality and position of the 'singer' so that locusts decide whether or not to respond.

The researchers believe that A.musicus 'sang ' at a relatively low 6.4kHz frequency to transmit the distant message.

Update 17 December 2018
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