Paleontologists(古生物学家) have discovered that a group of remarkable1 ancient sea creatures existed for much longer and grew to much larger sizes than previously2 thought, thanks to extraordinarily3 well-preserved fossils discovered in Morocco. The creatures, known as anomalocaridids, were already thought to be the largest animals of the Cambrian period, known for the "Cambrian Explosion" that saw the sudden appearance of all the major animal groups and the establishment of complex ecosystems4 about 540 to 500 million years ago. Fossils from this period suggested these marine5 predators6 grew to be about two feet long. Until now, scientists also thought these strange invertebrates8(无脊椎动物) —which had long spiny9 head limbs presumably used to snag worms and other prey10, and a circlet of plates around the mouth—died out at the end of the Cambrian.
Now a team led by former Yale researcher Peter Van Roy (now at Ghent University in Belgium) and Derek Briggs, director of the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, has discovered a giant fossilized anomalocaridid that measures one meter (more than three feet) in length. The anomalocaridid fossils reveal a series of blade like filaments11(花丝,细丝) in each segment across the animal's back, which scientists think might have functioned as gills.
In addition, the creature dates back to the Ordovician period, a time of intense biodiversification that followed the Cambrian, meaning these animals existed for 30 million years longer than previously realized.
"The anomalocaridids are one of the most iconic groups of Cambrian animals," Briggs said. "These giant invertebrate7 predators and scavengers have come to symbolize12 the unfamiliar13 morphologies displayed by organisms that branched off early from lineages leading to modern marine animals, and then went extinct. Now we know that they died out much more recently than we thought."
The specimens14 are just part of a new trove15 of fossils from Morocco that includes thousands of examples of soft-bodied marine fauna16 dating back to the early Ordovician period, 488 to 472 million years ago. Because hard shells fossilize and are preserved more readily than soft tissue, scientists had an incomplete and biased17 view of the marine life that existed during the Ordovician period before the recent discoveries in Morocco. The animals found in Morocco inhabited a muddy sea floor in fairly deep water, and were trapped by sediment18 clouds that buried them and preserved their soft bodies.
"The new discoveries in Morocco indicate that animals characteristic of the Cambrian, such as the anomalocaridids, continued to have a considerable impact on the biodiversity and ecology of marine communities many millions of years later," Van Roy said.
The paper appears in the May 26 issue of the journal Nature.