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Preserved fossils of marine animals living 480-472 million years ago found

By teronpi
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Google Oneindia News

London, May 14 (ANI): The discovery of over 1500 fossils of marine creatures, such as cheloniellid arthropod that lived nearly 500 million years ago, by American paleontologists is expected to fill the voids in the picture of ancient marine life on Earth.

The specimens, belonging to the early part of a period known as the Ordovician, are the oldest yet discovered soft-bodied fossils from the time.

Led by Peter Van Roy, a Yale postdoctoral associate, and Derek Briggs, the Frederick William Beinecke Professor of Geology and Geophysics and director of the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History the team uncovered more than 1,500 fossils of soft-bodied marine animals in newly discovered sites in south-eastern Morocco during a field expedition in 2009.

Many are complete fossils, and include sponges, annelid worms, mollusks and horseshoe crabs - in particular, a species similar to today's horseshoe crab, which appeared some 30 million years earlier than previously known.

The Cambrian period, known for the "Cambrian Explosion" that saw the sudden appearance of all the major animal groups and the establishment of complex ecosystems, was followed by the "Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event," when the number of marine animal genera increased exponentially over a period of 25 million years.

Because hard shells fossilize and are preserved more readily than soft tissue, scientists had an incomplete and biased view of the marine life that existed during the Ordovician period until now.

Briggs said: "The early Ordovician was a critical moment when massive diversification takes off, but we were only seeing a small piece of the picture that was based almost exclusively on the shelly fossil record.

"Normal faunas are dominated by the soft-bodied organisms we knew were missing, so these exceptionally well-preserved fossils have filled in much of the missing picture."

The site in Morocco where the fossils were discovered was conducive to preserving even the soft tissues of the creatures that lived in its waters so long ago, thanks to generally calm waters, occasional rapid burial that protected the animals from scavengers, and favourable chemical conditions within the sediment that allowed for the rapid mineralization of soft tissue as it decayed.

In addition to providing a more complete understanding of marine life at that time, the team's discovery upends a long-held belief that so-called Burgess Shale-type faunas, which are typical for the Early to Middle Cambrian, disappeared at the end of the Middle Cambrian epoch, some 499 million years ago.

First author Van Roy said: "There was an anomaly in the fossil record. Most of these animals just seemed to disappear at the end of the Middle Cambrian."

The team found that these Burgess Shale-type species survived well into the Ordovician period, which would have had a major impact on those ecosystems and their evolution, Van Roy said.

The team expects to find even more fossils representing other species during future planned expeditions in Morocco.

Van Roy said: "We're only scratching the surface," Van Roy said. "I'm certain there will be more spectacular fossils coming out of this site in the near future."

The findings of the team have been published in the May 13 issue of the journal Nature. (ANI)

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