462-Million-Year-Old Fossil Trove Holds Miniature World of Marine Creatures (2024)

May 10, 2023

4 min read

462-Million-Year-Old Fossil Trove Holds Miniature World of Marine Creatures

Paleontologists have uncovered a miniature world of sea creatures whose tiny guts, eyes and even brains remain visible 462 million years after they perished

By Jack Tamisiea

462-Million-Year-Old Fossil Trove Holds Miniature World of Marine Creatures (1)

Hidden inside a rocky outcrop near a flock of grazing sheep, a miniature world of marine creatures—whose guts, eyes and even brains remain visible after some 462 million years—has been uncovered by researchers.

Paleontologists Lucy Muir and Joseph Botting discovered the pint-sized fossil trove within walking distance from their home at Castle Bank Quarry in Central Wales. At the time the aquatic creatures were alive, this area was a rocky sea shelf fringing a volcanic island.

In a new study published online on May 1 in the journal Nature Ecology and Evolution, the duo and their colleagues in England, Sweden and China describe the site’s ancient inhabitants, most of which are just a couple of millimeters long and include nozzle-mouthed worms, horseshoe crabs, starfish and early barnacles. Also in the fossil trove are tiny enigmatic holdovers from the preceding Cambrian explosion, a period that started about 540 million years ago, when a burst of diverse life-forms emerged.

On supporting science journalism

If you're enjoying this article, consider supporting our award-winning journalism by subscribing. By purchasing a subscription you are helping to ensure the future of impactful stories about the discoveries and ideas shaping our world today.

The paleontologist couple initially discovered the deposit in 2013, when they spotted sponge fossils in a small quarry surrounded by sheep pasture. For years Muir and Botting, who are honorary research fellows at Amgueddfa Cymru–National Museum Wales, returned to the site to look for more fossils. But they failed to find traces of anything other than sponges.

During the COVID lockdown in 2020, they began describing the local suite of sponges as a pandemic project. One day Botting headed down to the quarry to search for more sponges. “And of course, that is the day that I first found a little tube with tentacles sticking out,” he recalls.

That fossil, which is only 3.5 mm tall and resembles a spindly alien spacecraft, looked unlike anything either paleontologist had ever seen. They quickly realized they were just scratching the site’s surface. Within a two-meter-thick band of rock, Botting and Muir found traces of a thriving ecosystem. Like a developing photograph, the fossils became apparent several seconds after the paleontologists cracked open the rocks. “You split them open, and after 30 seconds, they just magically appear,” Botting says.

Over several months the paleontologists discovered the fossils of around 170 different species that likely inhabited the rocky slope along a subsiding volcano. In addition to sponges and worms were trilobites, arthropods sporting grasping appendages and a six-legged animal that looked remarkably similar to a primitive insect that did not appear until millions of years later. There was also an animal reminiscent of Opabinia, a weird wonder of the Cambrian that had five eyes and a trunklike proboscis. Many of these evolutionary oddballs were delicately etched into the ash-colored stone, where soft-body features such as gills, digestive tracts, optic nerves and neural tissue—which rarely fossilize—were easily visible.

462-Million-Year-Old Fossil Trove Holds Miniature World of Marine Creatures (2)

The exquisite preservation of Castle Bank’s fossils resembles that uncovered from the Burgess Shale, the iconic, 500-million-year-old Cambrian deposit in the Canadian Rockies that has yielded the remains of some of the oldest complex animals on Earth. Researchers have found similarly stunning Cambrian fossil sites around the world.

But beautifully maintained animals are much rarer in the succeeding Ordovician period. According to Alycia Stigall, a paleontologist at the University of Tennessee at Knoxville, this is potentially because of a change in ocean chemistry during the Ordovician or a rise in burrowing organisms that exposed the remains of other animals to decay. Without these remnants, scientists know little about the majority of soft-bodied organisms that lived in the aftermath of the Cambrian explosion. “Today nonbiomineralizing organisms make up [around] 70 percent of all animals,” she says, referring to soft-bodied creatures. “Snapshots into the history of nonbiomineralizing animals like the Castle Bank fauna is incredibly important for developing a fuller understanding of the history of life,” adds Stigall, who was not involved in the new study.

The newfound fossils also offer an unparalleled glimpse into a dynamic chapter of evolution called the great Ordovician biodiversification event. “This is when life started to get really interesting,” Muir says. “As animals diversified, ecosystems became a lot more complicated.” While animal sizes stayed constant throughout the Cambrian, some ecosystems seemed to downsize during the Ordovician. Castle Bank’s fossils are generally small. Most of them measure between 1 and 5 mm.

Such shrinkage would usually be chalked up to a fossilization quirk where large-bodied organisms were washed away before they could be buried. But Botting and Muir think Castle Bank truly represents an ecosystem dominated by small life-forms. The stunning preservation of these fossils’ soft tissues reveals that the entire ecosystem was likely buried instantly, perhaps by a sudden rockslide, and this prevented decay and kept scavengers at bay. If larger creatures were milling around the ecosystem, they would have been buried alive as well. All the site’s trilobites are also juveniles, suggesting that this could have been a nursery. The paleontologists believe that the site’s relatively larger sponges and algae, which measure a couple of centimeters, offered the perfect habitat for these tiny creatures.

Though a miniscule realm of sea creatures may seem odd, Muir stresses that they remain a staple of ocean environments. “Most animals are small, and big animals are the exception,” Muir says. “It’s just that they’re harder to see.”

The researchers are still working to describe dozens of Castle Bank fossils in greater detail, including the tube-dwelling tentacled creature and the animal that resembles a possible marine precursor to insects. Like it was during the lockdown, their house is currently overflowing with fossils from the site. “Our spare room is so full, you can't sleep on the bed,” Botting says.

462-Million-Year-Old Fossil Trove Holds Miniature World of Marine Creatures (2024)

FAQs

What bizarre 465 million year old creature found with gut contents preserved? ›

Digestive tract contents of a preserved trilobite. Some 465 million years ago, an armored pill-bug-like creature called a trilobite scuttled across an ancient seafloor and apparently scarfed up anything it could, according to a new analysis of its exceptionally preserved gut contents.

How old are marine fossils? ›

The youngest mountain-top marine fossils are found in the Himalayas, which were elevated from the ocean floor by the collision between Asia and the Indian subcontinent about 20–25 million years ago. Whereas there are marine fossils in the Appalachians that are around 500 million years old.

What comes from tiny creatures that died in the ocean millions of years ago? ›

Petroleum (crude oil)

It was formed from the remains of tiny sea animals and plants that lived millions of years ago in a marine (water) environment before the dinosaurs.

What was the first ever living creature on Earth? ›

With an environment devoid of oxygen and high in methane, for much of its history Earth would not have been a welcoming place for animals. The earliest life forms we know of were microscopic organisms (microbes) that left signals of their presence in rocks about 3.7 billion years old.

What was the 500 million year old fossil found? ›

M. thylakos is the only definitive tunicate fossil with soft tissue preservation that has been discovered to date. It is the oldest of its kind originating from the middle Cambrian Marjum Formation in Utah.

What was in Borealopelta stomach? ›

Known as Borealopelta markmitchelli, this plant-muncher had been covered in plates of armor. In its belly, scientists found mostly fern leaves along with small amounts of palmlike cycads and conifer needles.

What creatures lived 1 million years ago? ›

Crocodiles, lizards, turtles, pythons, and other reptiles proliferated during this time, as did birds such as ducks, geese, hawks, and eagles. Larger versions of contemporary animals such as sloths, venomous lizards, marsupials, and armadillos roamed the landscape, before they were doomed by natural selection.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Stevie Stamm

Last Updated:

Views: 5699

Rating: 5 / 5 (60 voted)

Reviews: 91% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Stevie Stamm

Birthday: 1996-06-22

Address: Apt. 419 4200 Sipes Estate, East Delmerview, WY 05617

Phone: +342332224300

Job: Future Advertising Analyst

Hobby: Leather crafting, Puzzles, Leather crafting, scrapbook, Urban exploration, Cabaret, Skateboarding

Introduction: My name is Stevie Stamm, I am a colorful, sparkling, splendid, vast, open, hilarious, tender person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.