Visited Mistaken Point today.
Mistaken Point lies on the southern tip of the Avalon Peninsula, and is famous for its Ediacaran fossils. Ediacaran fossils are extremely rare and are among the first multicellular lifeforms on Earth. As they had no hard parts (skeletons or shells), they are only expected to be preserved under anoxic conditions or in areas where they were rapidly buried (like the early Cambrian fossils of the Burgess Shale), or (as here) where they have been buried by volcanic ash.
The Mistaken Point fossils are exposed on bedding planes, each of which was covered by the ash of a single volcanic eruption. There are numerous such bedding planes, and as the burial event was so rapid, each bedding surface represents a snapshot of the seafloor at a different times all around 565 million years ago.
There is still some uncertainty as to the phylogeny of these fossils. They appear to be different from any known animals. There have been suggestions that these all belong in a separate multicellular kingdom that is no longer extant. Not all of them have been given formal scientific names. The most common type, which are colloquially called "spindles", are assigned to the Fractofusus genera.
The animals lived on the seafloor, and most of them seem to have lived like barnacles today--anchored on the seafloor, sweeping the seawater for organic material.
Charnodiscus procers (left of centre) with recent damage done to the anchoring point- with another Fractofusus at top and possibly Beothikus mistakensis at right, just above the coin.
The animals were probably pretty common 565 million years ago. What makes them rare now is the difficulty of their preservation. These lived in deep water, in a time of frequent volcanic activity, possibly due to rifting of the Iapetus Ocean.
Fossil bed (at bottom) with overlying rocks of the Mistaken Pt. Formation. An ash bed is at most a few cm thick.
Fractofusus surface with thin ash cover (darker areas at upper and lower left, and middle right).
The falling ash (apparently an airborne ash cloud) almost instantaneously killed all the animals at the site, creating a "snapshot" in time.
Edit: This post seems appropriate here.
Mistaken Point lies on the southern tip of the Avalon Peninsula, and is famous for its Ediacaran fossils. Ediacaran fossils are extremely rare and are among the first multicellular lifeforms on Earth. As they had no hard parts (skeletons or shells), they are only expected to be preserved under anoxic conditions or in areas where they were rapidly buried (like the early Cambrian fossils of the Burgess Shale), or (as here) where they have been buried by volcanic ash.
The Mistaken Point fossils are exposed on bedding planes, each of which was covered by the ash of a single volcanic eruption. There are numerous such bedding planes, and as the burial event was so rapid, each bedding surface represents a snapshot of the seafloor at a different times all around 565 million years ago.
There is still some uncertainty as to the phylogeny of these fossils. They appear to be different from any known animals. There have been suggestions that these all belong in a separate multicellular kingdom that is no longer extant. Not all of them have been given formal scientific names. The most common type, which are colloquially called "spindles", are assigned to the Fractofusus genera.
Fractofusus sp. on fossil bed at Mistaken Point.
The animals lived on the seafloor, and most of them seem to have lived like barnacles today--anchored on the seafloor, sweeping the seawater for organic material.
Bacteria colony at Mistaken Point.
Charnodiscus procers (left of centre) with recent damage done to the anchoring point- with another Fractofusus at top and possibly Beothikus mistakensis at right, just above the coin.
The animals were probably pretty common 565 million years ago. What makes them rare now is the difficulty of their preservation. These lived in deep water, in a time of frequent volcanic activity, possibly due to rifting of the Iapetus Ocean.
Fossil bed (at bottom) with overlying rocks of the Mistaken Pt. Formation. An ash bed is at most a few cm thick.
Fractofusus surface with thin ash cover (darker areas at upper and lower left, and middle right).
The falling ash (apparently an airborne ash cloud) almost instantaneously killed all the animals at the site, creating a "snapshot" in time.
Edit: This post seems appropriate here.
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