نتایج جستجو برای: early cambrian schists

تعداد نتایج: 688211  

Journal: :Current Biology 2016
Nicholas J. Strausfeld Xiaoya Ma Gregory D. Edgecombe

The discovery of fossilized brains and ventral nerve cords in lower and mid-Cambrian arthropods has led to crucial insights about the evolution of their central nervous system, the segmental identity of head appendages and the early evolution of eyes and their underlying visual systems. Fundamental ground patterns of lower Cambrian arthropod brains and nervous systems correspond to the ground p...

2007
JONATHAN R. HENDRICKS BRUCE S. LIEBERMAN

ONE of John Shergold’s abiding research interests, and an area in which he made fundamental contributions to the fields of palaeontology and geology, was the study of Cambrian arthropods in general, and trilobites in particular (e.g., Shergold 1977, 1988, 1991; Shergold et al. 1990; Shergold & Laurie 1997). Here we focus on what Cambrian arthropods, including trilobites, can tell us about the n...

Journal: :Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences 2016
Graham E Budd Illiam S C Jackson

Simulation studies of the early origins of the modern phyla in the fossil record, and the rapid diversification that led to them, show that these are inevitable outcomes of rapid and long-lasting radiations. Recent advances in Cambrian stratigraphy have revealed a more precise picture of the early bilaterian radiation taking place during the earliest Terreneuvian Series, although several ambigu...

2016
Simon Conway Morris Susan L. Halgedahl Paul Selden Richard D. Jarrard

—The fossil record of early deuterostome history largely depends on soft-bodied material that is generally rare and often of controversial status. Banffiids and vetulicystids exemplify these problems. From the Cambrian (Series 3) of Utah, we describe specimens of Banffia episoma n. sp. (from the Spence Shale) and Thylacocercus ignota n. gen. n. sp. (from the Wheeler Formation). The new species ...

Journal: :Current Biology 2013
Michael S.Y. Lee Julien Soubrier Gregory D. Edgecombe

The near-simultaneous appearance of most modern animal body plans (phyla) ~530 million years ago during the Cambrian explosion is strong evidence for a brief interval of rapid phenotypic and genetic innovation, yet the exact speed and nature of this grand adaptive radiation remain debated. Crucially, rates of morphological evolution in the past (i.e., in ancestral lineages) can be inferred from...

Journal: :The Paleontological Society Special Publications 1996

2017
Chao Li Chengsheng Jin Noah J. Planavsky Thomas J. Algeo Meng Cheng Xinglian Yang Yuanlong Zhao Shucheng Xie

The early–middle Cambrian (Fortunian to Age 4) is characterized by a significant increase in metazoan diversification. Furthermore, this interval is marked by a prominent environmental and ecological expansion of arthropodand echinoderm-rich biotas. Recent redox work has suggested that this shift occurred during stable or decreasing marine oxygen levels, suggesting that these paleobiological an...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2012
Robert R Gaines Emma U Hammarlund Xianguang Hou Changshi Qi Sarah E Gabbott Yuanlong Zhao Jin Peng Donald E Canfield

Exceptionally preserved fossil biotas of the Burgess Shale and a handful of other similar Cambrian deposits provide rare but critical insights into the early diversification of animals. The extraordinary preservation of labile tissues in these geographically widespread but temporally restricted soft-bodied fossil assemblages has remained enigmatic since Walcott's initial discovery in 1909. Here...

Journal: :Proceedings. Biological sciences 2004
Di-Ying Huang Jun-Yuan Chen Jean Vannier J I Saiz Salinas

We report the discovery of sipunculan worms from the Lower Cambrian Maotianshan Shale, near Kunming (southwest China). Their sipunculan identity is evidenced by the general morphology of the animals (sausage-shaped body with a slender retractable introvert and a wider trunk) and by other features, both external (e.g. perioral crown of tentacles, and hooks, papillae and wrinkle rings on the body...

Journal: :BioEssays : news and reviews in molecular, cellular and developmental biology 2009
Kevin J Peterson Michael R Dietrich Mark A McPeek

One of the most interesting challenges facing paleobiologists is explaining the Cambrian explosion, the dramatic appearance of most metazoan animal phyla in the Early Cambrian, and the subsequent stability of these body plans over the ensuing 530 million years. We propose that because phenotypic variation decreases through geologic time, because microRNAs (miRNAs) increase genic precision, by t...

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