US scientists find oldest fossil tracks of legged animal
WASHINGTON (AFP) - US scientists have found the
oldest fossilized tracks of a tiny legged animal, from 570
million years ago, that push back the advent of more
complex creatures on Earth by some 30 million years, a
report said Sunday.
The fossilized trails, thought to belong to a centipede or a
leg-bearing worm that lived in the water, were found in
sedimentary rocks in the US state of Nevada, said Ohio
State University geology professor and the study's chief
author Loren Babcock.
The finding, as reported to the Geological Society of
America meeting Sunday in Houston, Texas, shatters the
belief that pre-Cambrian life on Earth was restricted to
microbes and simple, multicellular organisms.
The tracks, two parallel rows of small dots, each about
two millimeters in diameter, date back some 570 million
years, to the Ediacaran period (630-542 million years
ago).
They suggest that animals walked using legs at least 30
million years earlier than had been thought.
The Cambrian period (543-490 million years ago) saw an
evolutionary explosion that produced most of the major
animal groups we know today.
"We keep talking about the possibility of more complex
animals in the Ediacaran -- soft corals, some arthropods,
and flatworms -- but the evidence has not been totally
convincing," Babcock said.
"But if you find evidence, like we did, of an animal with
legs -- an animal walking around -- then that makes the
possibility much more likely," he added.
He said he was "reasonably certain" the the trails were
made by a centipede-like arthropod or a leg-bearing worm
with a centimeter-wide body.
A fossil of the actual animal would be more definitive, so
Babcock said he would continue searching the area of
Nevada that was covered by a shallow sea 570 million
years ago, where the "accidental discovery" of the
ancient trails was made.
He said other potential sites for similar Eciacaran fossils
include the White Sea area of Russia, South Australia,
Newfoundland and Namibia.
In 2002, other researchers found a similar fossil trail from
Canada that dated back to the middle of the Cambrian
period, about 520 million years ago.
Another set of tracks found in South China date back to
540 million years ago.
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