homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Ancient Fossilized Sea Creatures Yield Oldest Biomolecules Isolated Directly from a Fossil

Paleontologists have long believed that complex organic molecules couldn’t survive fossilization; but to contradict this long standing belief, some 350-million-year-old remains of aquatic sea creatures uncovered in Ohio, feature exactly that type of molecules.   The animals i n case are called crinoids, but are probably better known today as “sea lilies”; they are absolutely […]

Mihai Andrei
February 19, 2013 @ 12:18 pm

share Share

Paleontologists have long believed that complex organic molecules couldn’t survive fossilization; but to contradict this long standing belief, some 350-million-year-old remains of aquatic sea creatures uncovered in Ohio, feature exactly that type of molecules.

 

The animals icrinoids n case are called crinoids, but are probably better known today as “sea lilies”; they are absolutely remarkable creatures, able to survive from shallow waters to depths of up to 6.000 meters. The earliest group of crinoids lived in the Ordovician – some 460 million years ago. The Crinoids found by Ohio State University geologists are a little younger, dating from the Carboniferous – the period when North America was covered with vast inland seas. Typically, these creatures disintegrate fast, even in a few hours, but in some cases, like this one, they are buried quickly and covered with sediment which keeps them together. They are isolated from the water above by a sedimentary layer and their porous skeletons are gradually filled with minerals. What makes this discovery absolutely special is the fact that some of the pores containing organic molecules were sealed intact.

That’s what researchers concluded, at least. William Ausich, professor in the School of Earth Sciences at Ohio State and co-author of the paper, explained why the organic molecules are special:

“There are lots of fragmented biological molecules — we call them biomarkers — scattered in the rock everywhere. They’re the remains of ancient plant and animal life, all broken up and mixed together,” he said. “But this is the oldest example where anyone has found biomarkers inside a particular complete fossil. We can say with confidence that these organic molecules came from the individual animals whose remains we tested.”

Part of why the crinoids are so well preserved also has a lot to do with the location and the structure of their skeletons. In the flat American Midwest, the rocks weren’t pushed up into mountain chains or heated by volcanism – they are pretty much orogenically pristine. Conditions that preserve crinoids over such long periods of time are quite rare due to their skeletal structure.

“We think that rock fills in the skeleton according to how the crystals are oriented. So it’s possible to find large crystals filled in such a way that they have organic matter still trapped inside,” Ausich said.

This opens up a whole new area of paleontological research – directly analyzing organic material. Of course, this is not DNA, and it will never be as good as DNA, but it’s definitely important, and could mark a turning point.

“These molecules are not DNA, and they’ll never be as good as DNA as a means to define evolutionary relationships, but they could still be useful,” Ausich said. “We suspect that there’s some kind of biological signal there — we just need to figure out how specific it is before we can use it as a means to track different species.”

Via Ohio State University

share Share

It Looks Like a Ruby But This Is Actually the Rarest Kind of Diamond on Earth

One of Earth’s rarest gems finally reveals its secrets at the Smithsonian.

Scientists Used Lasers To Finally Explain How Tiny Dunes Form -- And This Might Hold Clues to Other Worlds

Decoding how sand grains move and accumulate on Earth can also help scientists understand dune formation on Mars.

Identical Dinosaur Prints Found on Opposite Sides of the Atlantic Ocean 3,700 Miles Apart

Millions of years ago, the Atlantic Ocean split these continents but not before dinosaurs walked across them.

Scientists Tracked a Mysterious 200-Year-Old Global Cooling Event to a Chain of Four Volcanoes

A newly identified eruption rewrites the volcanic history of the 19th century.

Scientists Found Traces of Gold Leaking from Earth’s Core

Traces of ruthenium in Hawaiian lava reveal long-suspected core–mantle leakage.

This beautiful rock holds evidence of tsunamis from 115 million years ago

The waves that shook the world 115 million years ago left behind an amber trail.

Meet Mosura fentoni, the Bug-Eyed Cambrian Weirdo with Three Eyes and Gills in Its Tail

Evolution went strong in this one.

Antarctica has a huge, completely hidden mountain range. New data reveals its birth over 500 million years ago

Have you ever imagined what Antarctica looks like beneath its thick blanket of ice? Hidden below are rugged mountains, valleys, hills and plains. Some peaks, like the towering Transantarctic Mountains, rise above the ice. But others, like the mysterious and ancient Gamburtsev Subglacial Mountains in the middle of East Antarctica, are completely buried. The Gamburtsev […]

Obsidian Artifacts Reveal a Hidden, Thriving Economy in the Aztec Empire

Aztecs weren’t just warriors and priests, they were savvy traders.

Archeologists Join Geologists in the Quest to Define the Age of Humans

A new archeology is being developed based on evidence of human activity in the Earth’s sedimentary record, and archeologists are helping to define the Anthropocene as a new stage in the geological record.