Hundreds of fossils of strange
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[August 01, 2019]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Hundreds of fossils
of a primordial sea creature with rake-like claws and a head resembling
a famous fictional spaceship have been unearthed in Canada, providing a
wealth of information about an important predator from a key time in the
evolution of life on Earth.
Scientists on Tuesday said the creature, called Cambroraster falcatus,
was a distant relative of today's arthropods - the diverse group of
animals including insects, spiders and crabs - and lived during the
Cambrian Period 506 million years ago, when all animal life lived in the
oceans.
"Most animals in the Cambrian Period were small, typically a few
centimeters long at most. By comparison, Cambroraster was a giant, at up
to a foot long (30 cm)," said paleontologist Joe Moysiuk of the Royal
Ontario Museum and University of Toronto, lead author of the research
published in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
Cambroraster was excavated in Kootenay National Park in the Canadian
Rockies from a rock formation known as the Burgess Shale that has
yielded fossils of a wondrous array of Cambrian animals. The Cambrian
was a time of evolutionary experimentation when nearly all major animal
groups first appeared and numerous oddballs came and went.
"With its huge head, small body and upward facing eyes, Cambroraster
superficially resembles a horseshoe crab, although in detail they are
quite different animals," Moysiuk said. "Just like horseshoe crabs, we
think Cambroraster spent its time hanging around near the sea floor,
feeding on organisms buried in the mud."
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An artist's reconstruction of the marine creature Cambroraster
falcatus, which lived 506 million years ago, is seen in this image
released by the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, Ontario, Canada,
July 30, 2019. Lars Fields/Royal Ontario Museum/Handout via REUTERS
Its large head was covered by a shield-like carapace whose shape
reminded the scientists of the Millennium Falcon spaceship of "Star
Wars" fame. At the front of its body were two large claws with a
succession of parallel outgrowths like a series of rakes, letting it
sift through seafloor mud and strain out any prey. Tooth-like plates
surrounded its circular mouth. It may have dined upon worms, small
fish and larvae.
It belonged to the same group - radiodonts - as the apex predator of
the time, called Anomalocaris, a dangerous hunter reaching three
feet (one meter) long that may even have targeted Cambroraster.
Radiodonts, among the earliest offshoots of the arthropod lineage,
are usually known from fragmentary remains. But the scientists found
such a large number of beautifully preserved and complete
Cambroraster fossils that they achieved a breakthrough in the
understanding of this significant extinct group.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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