Rich new trove of Cambrian fossils found


The Cambrian explosion is the name given to the discovery of a vast range of fossils of organisms that existed about 500 million years ago. The first discovery of them was made in the Burgess Shale region of Canada in 1909 and other troves were later found in China and Australia. But now comes a report of an extremely rich new trove that has been discovered, again in China.

Paleontologists found thousands of fossils in rocks on the bank of the Danshui river in Hubei province in southern China, where primitive forms of jellyfish, sponges, algae, anemones, worms and arthropods with thin whip-like feelers were entombed in an ancient underwater mudslide.

The creatures are so well preserved in the fossils that the soft tissues of their bodies, including the muscles, guts, eyes, gills, mouths and other openings are all still visible. The 4,351 separate fossils excavated so far represent 101 species, 53 of them new.

The fossilised organisms date back to 518m years ago when life on Earth experienced a massive burst in diversity known as the Cambrian explosion. The event, at the dawn of animal life, marked the arrival of all manner of unusual creatures. Many went extinct as evolutionary dead-ends, but others went on to form the first sturdy branches of the tree of life.

“These fossils help us to piece together the steps that evolution took as animals evolved from whatever squishy blob represents their common ancestor to the rich diversity of lineages alive today,” he added. “Because some of the preserved organisms are much simpler than their living relatives, they help us to tease apart how complex organs such as brains could be assembled through blind evolutionary processes.”

The paper reporting these findings in the journal Science can be read here and an accompanying article explaining the significance of the findings can be read here. Both are behind paywalls.

Evolution deniers ask “Where is the missing link?” Everything that has been found that dates between the Cambrian fossils and current species are of course ‘missing links’. But don’t expect deniers to accept that. They will keep asking that question because they have nothing else. As Herbert Spencer wrote back in 1852, “Those who cavalierly reject the Theory of Evolution as not being adequately supported by facts, seem to forget that their own theory is supported by no facts at all. Like the majority of men who are born to a given belief, they demand the most rigorous proof of any adverse belief, but assume their own needs none.”

Comments

  1. Pierce R. Butler says

    As Herbert Spencer wrote back in 1852, “Those who cavalierly reject the Theory of Evolution …”

    Since Darwin didn’t publish his ToE until 1858 (journal) or ’59 (book), whose and which Theory was Spencer defending?

    Was it adequately supported by facts?

  2. Mano Singham says

    Pierce @#1,

    Various theories of evolution (such as Lamarckism) and supporting evidence were around well before Darwin. What he and Wallace did was introduce the idea of natural selection as the mechanism for the process, as well as marshall all the evidence in one long comprehensive argument.

  3. Pierce R. Butler says

    Mano @ # 2 -- So Spencer spoke up for (what we now call) Lamarckism before he co-opted Darwin’s core idea for his (Spencer’s) own twisted sociology (“social Darwinism”)?

    That leaves Spencer in a remarkably poor position to lambaste others for inconsistent attitudes towards “evidence”.

  4. Mano Singham says

    There were many competing models for how evolution occurred but the evidence that evolution had occurred was deemed convincing for many biologists of that time. Darwin himself did not rule out a role for Lamarckism (or other alternatives such as use-disuse). He just felt that natural selection was the dominant mechanism.

    Spencer did not specifically advocate for Lamarckism or any specific mechanism, as far as I am aware. He was just saying that the evidence for evolution was conclusive. The argument he was addressing was between evolutionists and special creationists who denied that evolution had occurred. The fact that Spencer went on to infer social Darwinism at play in human affairs does not mean that his statement that much evidence supported evolution is false.

  5. Pierce R. Butler says

    True enough, and Spencer did indeed state it well.

    It just seems particularly ironic coming from him, especially considering his own later career of intellectual hijacking & hypocrisy.

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