Left: Illustration of Metaspriggina swimming. Right: Fossil of Metaspriggina from Marble Canyon 鈥 head to the left with two eyes, and branchial arches at the top.

A major fossil discovery in Canada sheds new light on the development of the earliest vertebrates, including the origin of jaws, the first time this feature has been seen so early in the fossil record

Having a hypothetical model swim into the fossil record like this is incredibly gratifying

Simon Conway Morris

A key piece in the puzzle of the evolution of vertebrates has been identified, after the discovery of fossilised fish specimens, dating from the Cambrian period (around 505 million years old), in the Canadian Rockies. 探花直播fish, known as Metaspriggina, shows pairs of exceptionally well-preserved arches near the front of its body. 探花直播first of these pairs, closest to the head, eventually led to the evolution of jaws in vertebrates, the first time this feature has been seen so early in the fossil record.听

Fish fossils from the Cambrian period are very rare and usually poorly preserved. This new discovery shows in unprecedented detail how some of the earliest vertebrates developed 鈥 the starting point of a story which led to animals such as later fish species, but also dinosaurs and mammals such as horses and even ourselves. 探花直播 are published in the 11 June edition of the journal Nature.

Fossils of Metaspriggina were recovered from several locations including the Burgess Shale site in Canada鈥檚 Rocky Mountains, one of the richest Cambrian fossil deposits in the world. These fossils shed new light on the Cambrian 鈥榚xplosion鈥, a period of rapid evolution starting around 540 million years ago, when most major animal phyla originated.

Previously, only two incomplete specimens of Metaspriggina had been identified. During expeditions conducted by the Royal Ontario Museum in 2012, 44 new Burgess Shale fossils were collected near Marble Canyon in Kootenay National Park in British Columbia, which provide the basis for this study. Researchers from the 探花直播 of Cambridge and the Royal Ontario Museum/ 探花直播 of Toronto used these fossils, along with several more specimens from the eastern United States, to reclassify Metaspriggina as one of the first vertebrates.

探花直播fossils, which date from 505 million years ago, also show clearly for the first time how a series of rod-like structures, known as the gill or branchial arches, were arranged in the earliest vertebrates. These arches have long been known to have played a key role in the evolution of vertebrates, including the origin of jaws, and some of the tiny bones in the ear which transmit sound in mammals. Until now, however, a lack of quality fossils has meant that the arrangement of these arches in the first vertebrates had been hypothetical.

Vertebrates first appear in the fossil record slightly earlier than these finds, but pinpointing exactly how they developed is difficult. This is because fossils of such animals are rare, incomplete and open to varying interpretations, as they show soft tissues which are difficult to identify with complete certainty.

探花直播new fossils of Metaspriggina are remarkably well-preserved. 探花直播arrangement of the muscles shows these fish were active swimmers, not unlike a trout, and the animals saw the world through a pair of large eyes and sensed their surrounding environment with nasal structures.

鈥 探花直播detail in this Metaspriggina fossil is stunning,鈥 said lead author Professor Simon Conway Morris of Cambridge鈥檚 Department of Earth Sciences. 鈥淓ven the eyes are beautifully preserved and clearly evident.鈥

But it is the branchial arches which makes this discovery so important. Previously, they were thought to exist as a series of single arches, but Metaspriggina now shows that they in fact existed in pairs. 探花直播anteriormost pair of arches is also slightly thicker than the remainder, and this subtle distinction may be the very first step in an evolutionary transformation that in due course led to the appearance of the jaw. 鈥淥nce the jaws have developed, the whole world opens,鈥 said Professor Conway Morris. 鈥淗aving a hypothetical model swim into the fossil record like this is incredibly gratifying.鈥

鈥淥bviously jawed fish came later, but this is like a starting post 鈥 everything is there and ready to go,鈥 said the paper鈥檚 co-author Dr Jean-Bernard Caron, Curator of Invertebrate Palaeontology at the Royal Ontario Museum and and associate professor in the Departments of Earth Sciences and Ecology & Evolutionary Biology at the 探花直播 of Toronto. 鈥淣ot only is this a major new discovery, one that will play a key role in understanding our own origins, but Marble Canyon, the new Burgess Shale locality itself has fantastic potential for revealing key insights into the early evolution of many other animal groups during this crucial time in the history of life.鈥

David Wilks, Member of Canadian Parliament for Kootenay-Columbia, noted, 鈥 探花直播Government of Canada is excited about this incredible fossil find. As an international leader in conservation and steward of the Burgess Shale, Parks Canada is pleased to provide its research partners with access to the fossils. Their remarkable discoveries inform the work we do to share this rich natural history through our popular guided hikes, and to protect this important Canadian heritage in a national park and UNESCO World Heritage Site.鈥


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