If you think finding a needle in a haystack sounds challenging, try searching for fossils the size of fingernail clippings in massive slabs of rock.
But that’s just what a team of scientists is doing at a site in Chengjiang, China. And they recently struck a fossil jackpot, discovering an extremely rare arthropod larva fossil measuring a mere 0.08 inches (2 millimeters) long.
The fossil, estimated to be 520 million years old, was preserved in 3D, presenting the researchers with an exceptional level of detail for this very early stage of the creature’s development. It also provided them with a first glimpse of ancestral larval forms in arthropods, the invertebrate animal group with exoskeletons and segmented bodies that includes arachnids, crustaceans and insects.
The larva has a segmented body, with two large structures on its head, four pairs of branching legs and three additional pairs of legs that are much less developed. Its posterior is tipped with a “dagger-like” appendage, framed by two triangular forms resembling paddles, which the scientists suggest may have been used for swimming.
This is the first fossil of its kind to be found at Chengjiang since the site’s discovery in 1984, according to Yu Liu, the study’s lead author and a postdoctoral researcher at the Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität in Munich.
The researchers identified the tiny fossil as a known species — Leanchoilia illecebrosa, a member of the “short great appendage arthropods,” which earned their name due to the large claw-like structures attached to their heads, likely used for feeding or for sensing their environment.
In fact, it was the shape of those appendages in the larva fossil that helped the scientists with their identification, Liu told Live Science in an email.
But compared to adult forms, other limbs in the fossil were not as well developed. This told the scientists that the new discovery represented an early larval stage, Liu said.
Hidden in rock
Finding fossils this small is no easy task. It begins with removing large slabs of rock, splitting them into somewhat smaller slabs, and then reviewing them with a magnifying lens to see if there might be “something interesting” preserved in them, according to Liu.
“As you may imagine, the chance of finding a fossil is not very high,” Liu told Live Science. “In most cases, you get one fossil after separating tens of slabs. The chance of finding a GOOD fossil is even lower. You need to separate hundreds or even thousands of slabs for that.”
Such tiny and delicate specimens like this one can’t be isolated from the rocky material around them with the methods traditionally used for chipping out larger fossils. Paleontologists use microphotography and scanning technology rather than picks, drills, or chisels to “penetrate” the rock and show them the remains of once-living animals preserved inside.
3D surprise
And finding such a small fossil preserved in 3D was unexpected and exciting, Liu said. Micro computed tomography — micro-CT scans — of the larva offered a highly detailed picture of its body, with an interesting surprise as a result.
This particular larva’s body type — one in which body segments are added as the creature grows to adulthood — was already thought to be typical for modern crustaceans, Liu said. But, finding one this far back in the fossil record hints that this was a feature in all other arthropod ancestors, as well.
Read more at Discovery News
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