HOME >> BIOLOGY >> NEWS
Still shellfish after 425 million years: Clam-like creature preserved perfectly in ancient fossil

An ancient shellfish not seen for 425 million years is recreated in vivid 3D images published today, following a unique fossil find in the UK.

The 'articulate brachiopod' fossil, found in a quarry in Herefordshire, England, is the first of its kind to be preserved with its soft parts intact in 3D. It was discovered by Dr Mark Sutton of Imperial College London, who reveals the structure of the clam-like organism using a 3D colour computer model in this week's Nature.

Showing the internal structure of the brachiopod as well as the stalk and rootlets that kept it tethered in place, the model gives a unique insight into the workings of the ancient shellfish.

Dr Mark Sutton, a lecturer in the Department of Earth Science and Engineering, who discovered the fossil alongside colleagues at the Universities of Yale, Oxford and Leicester, said: "This is a significant discovery because it is something we never dared to dream we might see - an ancient fossil articulate brachiopod with its fleshy parts intact, and preserved in three-dimensions to boot.

"Up to now, in all the millions of articulate brachiopod fossils scientists have examined, no-one has ever found anything except empty shells. This fossil helps us understand one of the most common creatures to have lived in the ancient oceans of the world," adds Dr Sutton, who gave the fossil the Latin name Bethia serraticulma after his wife Bethia.

The find has challenged the assumption that ancient brachiopods were put together in the same way as their modern descendents. The ancient model is unusual because its rootlets are physically tied onto a stick-like object on the sea-floor, most likely to be debris from a dead sea-lily. Some modern brachiopods have rootlets, but they spread out into soft sediment, just as plant roots do.

"Those brachiopods that stick to a hard object do it chemically, rather than tying themselves on," explains Dr Sutton. "Bethia's stalk is also much c
'"/>

Contact: Laura Gallagher
L.Gallagher@imperial.ac.uk
44-207-594-6702
Imperial College London
17-Aug-2005


Page: 1 2

Related biology news :

1. Overfishing large sharks impacts entire marine ecosystem, shrinks shellfish supply
2. Mutation in clams protects against paralytic shellfish poisoning but raises human health risk
3. Paralytic shellfish toxins cause mutation that allows clams to accumulate 100 times more toxin
4. Study suggests estrogen deficiency can lead to obesity-induced high blood pressure after menopause
5. Brains hearing center may reorganize after implant of cochlear device
6. Expert to provide update after worst tomato virus hits California
7. Losing weight after pregnancy -- diet and exercise better than diet alone
8. Cardiac patches stimulate regeneration, improve function after heart attack
9. Nodal status is best predictor of outcome after neoadjuvant therapy for esophageal cancer
10. First baby is born after oocytes were matured in the lab and frozen
11. Marker predicts pancreatic cancer outcome after surgery, Jefferson surgeon finds

Post Your Comments:
(Date:6/17/2013)... BOSTON , June 17, 2013 ... prolific, the need to secure them grows exponentially, ... the latest report from Heavy Reading Insider ... from Heavy Reading ( www.heavyreading.com ). ... Smartphones examines the market for biometric authentication on ...
(Date:6/17/2013)... the topics under discussion during the E3 Forum, ... consecutive year, this will be a unique event ... members of Academy, Business, Educators, Entrepreneurs, Innovators, Policy-makers ... Martn Garijo (IBM South Europe), Chris Zegras (MIT), ... (Hovione), among others. E3 Forum - Education, Employment ...
(Date:6/16/2013)... 16, 2013)Male mice who were fed a high-fat diet ... who also had higher levels of body fat, a ... observed primarily in male offspring, despite their consumption of ... meeting of The Endocrine Society in San Francisco, Calif. ... affect metabolism and behavior of offspring dependent on the ...
Breaking Biology News(10 mins):Biometric Authentication Provides Better Mobile Device Security, Heavy Reading Finds 2Biometric Authentication Provides Better Mobile Device Security, Heavy Reading Finds 3'E3 Forum -- Education, Employment & Entrepreneurship on a Global context' 2Obese male mice father offspring with higher levels of body fat 2
(Date:6/18/2013)... Phoenix, AZ (PRWEB) June 18, 2013 ... the 2013 Innovation Challenge Winner out of hundreds of ... in its spring Arizona Innovation Challenge . The ... the country for a technology commercialization challenge, granting a ... world’s most promising technology ventures. Nasseo’s state of the ...
(Date:6/18/2013)... ALBANY, N.Y. , June 18, 2013 /PRNewswire/ ... that its Burlington, Mass. , ... U.S. Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) registration to handle ... represents the DEA,s acknowledgement of Burlington,s ... inventory control and documentation. (Logo: ...
(Date:6/18/2013)... 18, 2013 Research ... the addition of the report " DNA ... to their offering.      (Logo: ... basics of human genome variations, development of ... and small sequencers are described as well ...
(Date:6/18/2013)... Though health care jobs continued to ... Bureau of Labor Statistics -- the increase was far below ... new health care jobs were added in home health care ... of 6,000 jobs. Overall, the U.S. unemployment rate stayed flat ... Christmas reported that a total of just over 36,000 job ...
Breaking Biology Technology:Nasseo Named 2013 Innovation Challenge Winner by Arizona Commerce Authority 2AMRI Burlington Receives DEA Approval to Handle Controlled Substances 2DNA Sequencing: Technologies, Markets and Companies - 2013 Report 2MedZilla Employment Report for June 2013 -- Jobs in Health Care Grow, But at Slower Pace 2MedZilla Employment Report for June 2013 -- Jobs in Health Care Grow, But at Slower Pace 3
Cached News: