'Mindblowing' Haul of Fossils Over 500M Years Old Unearthed in China
An undescribed species of Leanchoilia, an arthropod, from the Qingjiang fossil site. Photo: FU ET AL |
Scientists have uncovered a wealth of well-preserved fossils in China from the early Cambrian Period, representing 101 species so far, over half of which have never been described before.
The most recent 12% of time on Earth is a striking anomaly when compared with the great bulk of our planet’s evolution. After 3 billion years or more of Earth as a microbial world, cells found ways to grow and assemble in their millions to build eyes, guts, muscles, nerve systems with brains, skeletons and the rest of the complex structures that form the mobile, sentient, marvellously various animals that fill our now familiar world.
The speed of this transition, seen by geologists in the sudden appearance of complex fossils such as trilobites in layers of rock, seemed so shockingly abrupt that it amazed and worried even Charles Darwin. As this flowering of complex multicellular life is used to mark the beginning of the Cambrian Period of Earth time, 541m years ago, it has long been called the “Cambrian explosion”.
We now know it was not quite so abrupt. The evolution actually took place in distinct stages over more than 30m years – the pioneering geologist Preston Cloud called it “the Cambrian eruption”.
Together these have given a detailed picture from near the dawn of animal life in the marine realm (the land, then, was still largely barren): a wealth of arthropods, worms, lamp shells, sponges, chordates, and even some animals that still defy biological assignment.
Now another Cambrian Lagerstätte has turned up – and the first results, just published in Science, suggest that it may rival those of the Burgess Shale and Chengjiang. It is also in China, in Qingjiang in Hubei province, and is about the same age as the Chengjiang, some 518m years old, and so in the early part of the Cambrian Period.
Indeed, it formed on the same general stretch of continental shelf sea as the Chengjiang fossils, about 1,000km away, and seemingly in somewhat deeper waters. What is surprising is that not only are the fossils just as exquisite, but they represent quite different animal communities. The Cambrian seas were clearly more diverse than thought, even in those early days.
These are rare in the Burgess Shale and Chengjiang deposits, but among the Qingjiang fossils there are many astounding examples, flattened on the shale surfaces and preserving fine details of these softest of anatomies.
The comb jellies may be the earliest form of animal – a title that they currently contest with the sponges. Both these kinds of animal are preserved here, in numbers and fidelity that may help resolve the dispute.
Other strange and wonderful animals appear in the Qingjiang strata, and represent curious and perhaps profound trends in evolution. There are kinorhynchs, for example – these are the “mud dragons”, animals that are today obscure because they are part of the “meiofauna”, those tiny creatures that live between grains of sediment on the sea floor.
Here, three new fossil forms have been found, some up to 4cm long, rather than the contemporary sub-millimetre size. These Cambrian giants suggest that some of today’s meiofauna started off “normally” sized, and then became miniaturised – for good.
It is a true cornucopia. How did it form? The same kind of quickfire preservation process is mooted as for the Burgess Shale and the Chengjiang fossils: the animals were caught up in mud slurries, and carried down to deep, oxygen-starved parts of the sea floor to be rapidly buried in the stifling mud. It makes sense – but then such conditions and processes persisted long after the Cambrian, and yet were rarely associated with such bonanza fossil finds. There is much that remains mysterious about the dawn of life as we know it – but the Qingjiang fossils, as we study them more, will slowly shed light on these enigmas.
The study was published in the journal Science.
The above post is reprinted from The Conversation.