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Judi Lynn

(160,545 posts)
Thu Feb 21, 2019, 01:42 AM Feb 2019

Exploring the Mysterious Life of One of Earth's First Giant Organisms

Strange creatures known as “rangeomorphs” could help paleontologists understand the origins of animal life

By Annie Sneed on August 8, 2017



An artist’s depiction of the extinct giant, frondshaped
organisms known as rangeomorphs. Credit: Reid Psaltis


Paleontologists unearthed a strange sight in Newfoundland in the early 2000s: an ancient fossil bed of giant, frond-shaped marine organisms. Researchers had discovered these mysterious extinct creatures—called rangeomorphs—before, but they continue to defy categorization. Now scientists believe the Newfoundland fossils and their brethren could help answer key questions about life on Earth.

Rangeomorphs date back to the Ediacaran period, which lasted from about 635 million to 541 million years ago. They had stemlike bodies that sprouted fractal-like branches and were soft like jellyfish. Scientists think these creatures grew to sizes until then unseen among animals—up to two meters long. After they went extinct, the planet saw an explosion of diverse large animal life during the Cambrian. “Rangeomorphs are part of the broader context of what was going on at this time in Earth's history,” says study co-author Jennifer Hoyal Cuthill, a paleobiology research fellow at the Tokyo Institute of Technology. Figuring out how rangeomorphs grew to such great sizes could help provide context for understanding how big, diverse animals originated and how conditions on Earth—which were shifting around this time—may have affected the evolution of life.

To better understand these connections, Hoyal Cuthill and University of Cambridge paleontologist Simon Conway Morris analyzed several rangeomorph fossils. The pair performed a micro CT scan on one well-preserved fossil of a species called Avalofractus abaculus, found in Newfoundland, to examine its 3-D structure in fine detail. They also took photographic measurements of two other specimens for comparison.

The researchers examined various aspects of the rangeomorphs' stems and branches, then used mathematical models to investigate the relation between the fossils' surface areas and volumes. Their models, combined with the fossil observations, revealed that the organisms' size and shape appeared to be governed by the amount of available nutrients, according to the study, published recently in Nature Ecology & Evolution. This may explain why they could reach such large sizes during a period when Earth's geochemistry was changing.

More:
https://www.scientificamerican.com/article/exploring-the-mysterious-life-of-one-of-earths-first-giant-organisms/

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