|

Deep
blue research digs up evolutionary past
Friday, November 21, 2008
University
of Queensland deep sea research has dug up an insight into the
evolutionary past of some of the earliest animals.
Professor
Justin Marshall, from UQ's Queensland Brain Institute and School
of Biomedical Sciences, was part of an international team who
found grape-like balls – called giant protists – off
the coast of the Bahamas that throw into doubt long-held views
about the evolution of multi-cellular organisms.
“We
saw these single-cell organisms leave tracks that are similar to
tracks found in the fossil record which were believed to have
been made by multi-cellular organisms,” Professor Marshall
said.
“This is the first evidence that organisms
other than multi-cellular animals can produce such traces.
“The
discovery throws into doubt when people believe multi-cellular
life began.”
The fossil record of tracks like these
date back 1.8 billion years, way before the earliest fossil
record of the animals themselves which are found in the early
Cambrian period of around 542 million years ago.
Professor
Marshall said the organisms, were spotted during a deep sea
expedition last year, but it was only by chance the scientists
knew they had stumbled upon something unique.
“The
tracks they made were like long furrows in the sea floor,”
he said.
“Initially we thought the tracks might
have been made by the ocean currents, but we saw them roll
themselves along the sea floor, even up hills.
“We
recognized the tracks these animals had made as similar to those
known only from the fossil records. One of us remembered a
paleontological book cover he had seen.”
“It
was just one of those things, as we were not there looking for
this at all. It really just shows the nature of science how we
can stumble upon these things.
He said the deep sea
research involved colleagues from America and use of the Harbor
Branch Oceanographic Institute in an expedition called “Deep
Scope” to the depths off the Bahamas to 1km. The US
National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Office of Ocean
Exploration and Research significantly funded several years of
the interdisciplinary research that led to this discovery
“This
really shows the importance of going to places where people have
not been before,” he said.
Image Caption: A giant protist,
found off the coast of the Bahamas, which is shedding new light
on the evolution of multi-cellular organisms.
Image Credit: University of
Queensland
Source: University of
Queensland
Permalink:
http://www.sflorg.com/comm_center/unv_science/p743_200.html
Time Stamp: 11/21/2008 at
12:47:37 PM UTC
|
Scientific
Frontline®
RSS
Feeds
Scientific
Frontline®
The
Comm Center
The
E.A.R.®
World
News Report
Stellar
Nights®
Cassini
Gallery
Mars
Gallery
Missions
Gallery
Observatories
Gallery
Space
Weather Alerts
Events
Directors
Chair
Scientific
Frontline®
Is
supported in part by “Readers Like You”
|