Researchers have discovered the earliest known animal fossil footprints in South China, dating back about 635-541 million years.
Bilaterian animals such as arthropods and annelids have paired appendages and are among the most diverse animals today and in the geological past, said researchers from the Chinese Academy of Sciences and Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University in the US.
They are often assumed to have appeared and radiated suddenly during the Cambrian Explosion about 541 to 510 million years ago, although it has long been suspected that their evolutionary ancestry was rooted in the Ediacaran Period.
Until the current discovery, however, no fossil record of animal appendages had been found from the Ediacaran Period, according to the study published in the journal Science Advances.
Researchers studied trackways and burrows discovered in the Ediacaran Shibantan Member of the Dengying Formation (551-541 million years ago) in the Yangtze Gorges area of South China.
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The trackways are somewhat irregular, consisting of two rows of imprints that are arranged in series or repeated groups.
The characteristics of the trackways indicate that they were produced by bilaterian animals with paired appendages that raised the animal body above the water-sediment interface.
The trackways appear to be connected to burrows, suggesting that the animals may have periodically dug into sediments and microbial mats, perhaps to mine oxygen and food.
These trace fossils represent some of the earliest known evidence for animal appendages and extend the earliest trace fossil record of animals with appendages from the early Cambrian to the late Ediacaran Period.
The body fossils of the animals that made these traces, however, have not yet been found. It is possible that such remains were never preserved.
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