Oldest species of swimming jellyfish discovered in 505m-year-old fossils
- August 3, 2023
- Posted by: OptimizeIAS Team
- Category: DPN Topics
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Oldest species of swimming jellyfish discovered in 505m-year-old fossils
Subject :Geography
Section: Physical Geography
Context:
- The oldest species of swimming jellyfish ever recorded has been discovered in 505m-year-old fossils.
Details:
- The fossils were found at Burgess Shale in Canada, an area known for the number of well-preserved fossils found there.
- The new species, which has been named Burgessomedusaphasmiformis, resembles a large, swimming jellyfish with a saucer or bell-shaped bodyup to 20cm high.
- Its roughly 90 short tentacles would have allowed it to capture sizable prey.
- The discovery of Burgessomedusaphasmiformis has shown that the Cambrian food chain was much more complex than previously imagined.
About Jellyfish:
- Jellyfish belong to a subgroup of cnidaria, the oldest group of animals to exist, called medusozoans.
- Jellyfish are mainly free-swimming marine animals with umbrella-shaped bells and trailing tentacles, although a few are anchored to the seabed by stalks rather than being mobile.
- They are made of 95% water and decay quickly, so fossilized specimens are rarely found, but the specimens – found in the late 1980s and early 1990s – were exceptionally well preserved.
- Jellyfish, along with their relatives, have been “remarkably hard to pin down in the Cambrian fossil record” despite being part of one of the earliest groups of animals.
- Jellyfish are found all over the world, from surface waters to the deep sea.
Burgess shale, Canada:
- The Burgess Shale is a fossil-bearing deposit exposed in the Canadian Rockies of British Columbia, Canada.
- It is famous for the exceptional preservation of the soft parts of its fossils.
- At 508 million years old (middle Cambrian), it is one of the earliest fossil beds containing soft-part imprints.
- The rock unit is a black shale and crops out at a number of localities near the town of Field in Yoho National Park and the Kicking Horse Pass.
- Another outcrop is in Kootenay National Park 42 km to the south.