The Info Sage

  • Home
  • About Us
  • News Updates
    • Asia News Updates
    • Business News Updates
    • Entertainment News Updates
    • Health News Updates
    • Lifestyles
    • National News Updates
    • Other News
    • Science & Technology News Updates
    • Sports News Updates
    • World News Updates
  • Forums
  • Blogs
    • Submit Blog Post
    • Latest in Blogs
  • Contact Us

Navigation

  • Blogs
  • Recent posts

User login

  • Create new account
  • Request new password

Current weather

New Delhi / Palam

Broken clouds, mist
  • Broken clouds, mist
  • Temperature: 28 °C
  • Wind: East, 5.6 km/h
  • Pressure: 1004 hPa
  • Rel. Humidity: 89 %
  • Visibility: 2.8 km
Reported on:
Sat, 09/04/2010 - 09:30
Home » News articles » 24 Oct 2009 » Scientists peek through window on evolution of earliest shell-covered fossil animals

Scientists peek through window on evolution of earliest shell-covered fossil animals

Submitted by admin on Sat, 10/24/2009 - 02:28

Washington, October 23 (ANI): In a new research, scientists are studying the fossil remains of some of the first animals with shells, ocean-dwelling creatures that measure a few centimeters in length and date to about 520 million years ago, to provide a window on evolution at this time.

The research was carried out by John Moore, a Ph.D. student in the Department of Earth Science at UC (University of California) Santa Barbara, and his collaborators, who analyzed fossils from the epoch called the Early Cambrian.

During this important time in the history of the earth, there was a tremendous diversification of animal life in the oceans.

Many of the major animal groups that are still alive today appeared at this time, as well as many unusual groups that went extinct.

In particular, the Cambrian marked the first widespread occurrence of animals with shells or other hard parts.

Many of these early animals had complex external armors containing dozens to thousands of tiny pieces.

When the animals died, the armor fell apart. From the resulting jumbled puzzle pieces, Moore and his research team discerned what the animals were like, and how they are related to other animals.

"In our study, we focused on a strange Cambrian creature, called Cambrothyra," said Moore.

He explained that Cambrothyra fossils look like tiny jars or vases, a few tenths of a millimeter long. They have been found in only a few locations in central China.

The research team collected rocks from China's Shaanxi Province and brought them back to the lab where they extracted the fossils from the host rocks.

"While some scientists once thought that each little jar-like structure of Cambrothyra was the shell of a tiny single-celled protist, our work instead supports the hypothesis that Cambrothyra was an animal, probably a few centimeters long, that was covered with an armor that was made up of hundreds of separate tiny, jar-shaped pieces," said Moore.

"In particular, Cambrothyra seems to be related to another unusual Cambrian animal, the chancelloriids, which were attached to the sea floor and looked a bit like barrel cacti-although they were animals rather than plants which suggests that Cambrothyra may have been a relative," he added.

Cambrothyra also shares similarities with a different Cambrian group, the halkieriids.

This animal looked like a slug covered with armor. It traveled around the sea floor and thus may help support the idea that chancelloriids and halkieriids are closely related to each other, despite very different appearances. (ANI)

  • All articles by admin
Tags:
  • Science & Technology News Updates

Related Posts

How females control sperm storage to pick the best dad
Chimps can "catch" yawn from yawning toons
Gecko's tail has a mind of its own
Turning off oncogene may inhibit lung cancer stem cells' growth
Brain circuit that controls binge eating uncovered
Leona Lewis wishes she could forget about red carpets and 'just sing'
Molecular mechanism underlying severe form of diabetes in kids identified
Song birds have to deal with cover artists too
Scientists give evolutionary explanation for fertility problems

Sponsored Links

Recent News

  • LiLo 'hits baby stroller and nanny with her Maserati'
  • Soon, pill to shake off lethargy may one day be a reality
  • Ambika Soni to address media community during Kerala visit
  • Doping cases will not affect India's performance in CWG: Bhanot
  • Cheryl Cole and Ashley's 60-second divorce
  • White House gatecrasher hands over red party dress for auction
  • Tony Blair explains why Bill Clinton cheated
  • Tiger Woods 'smiled and posed for pic right after divorce'
  • Dodgy breast implants not likely to explode, say experts
  • Pak links India to Wednesday's Lahore attack despite Taliban acknowledgment
  • Emergency declared after massive 7.1-magnitude earthquake hits Christchurch
  • Blackwater accused of bagging US Govt contracts through plethora of dummy companies
  • Nine killed in plane crash in New Zealand
  • Worshipers miraculously escape from Leicester Hare Krishna temple after massive explosion,
  • Brit women tourists branded 'ugliest in the world'
more
I love Smashing Magazine!
Copyright © 2007-2010, The Info Sage - Latest India, Asia, World News Updates, Breaking, Sports, Lifestyles, Science & Tech, Health, Entertainment and Business News Updates.