Science
Related: About this forumSpectacular fossil treasure trove pushes back origins of complex animals
https://phys.org/news/2026-04-spectacular-fossil-treasure-trove-complex.htmlUniversity of Oxford

A deuterostome cambroernid fossil from the Jiangchuan Biota (~554-539 million years old) and artist's reconstruction, scale bar: 2mm. Credit: Gaorong Li & Xiaodong Wang.
A newly discovered fossil site in southwest China has transformed our understanding of how complex animal life emerged on Earth, revealing that many key animal groups had already evolved before the start of the Cambrian Period. The study, led by researchers at Oxford University's Museum of Natural History and Department of Earth Sciences as well as Yunnan University in China, has been published in Science.
One of the most transformative events in Earth's history was the rapid diversification of animal life, resulting in a dramatic increase in complexity and diversity from simpler life forms.
Up to now, this was thought to have occurred at the start of the Cambrian Period, in an event known as the Cambrian explosion, starting around 535 million years ago. The new study, however, shifts this timeframe back by at least 4 million years, to the end of the Ediacaran period.
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Reconstruction of Jiangchuan biota (~554-539 million years ago). Credit: Xiaodong Wang.
The discovery comes from the Jiangchuan Biota in Yunnan Province, southwest China, where more than 700 fossil specimens were recovered, aged between 554 and 539 million years old. The fossil site revealed a diverse community of Ediacaran organisms--both new, undescribed animal forms and groups known from the Cambrian period.
Most strikingly, the international team identified fossils thought to be the oldest known relatives of deuterostomes--the broader group that today includes vertebrates such as humans and fish. The new fossils push the fossil record of deuterostomes back into the Ediacaran Period for the first time.
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calimary
(90,790 posts)Fossils have always fascinated me. This one blows my mind!
Is that before or after Adam and Eve?
paleotn
(22,737 posts)muriel_volestrangler
(106,599 posts)The International Commission on Stratigraphy says the Cambrian Period started 538.8 ± 0.6 million years ago. If you look at older webpages, they tend to give older dates still, such as 541 million years ago (back in the 1990s, it was 570 million years ago; I have a 1981 encyclopedia that says 590 million years ago, and Carl Sagan say 600 in Cosmos (perhaps rounding)).
So I'd like to know when the start had moved from 539 (to the nearest million, and inside the range from the international body defining it) to 535, for this "complex animals started in the Ediacaran" claim to be meaningful.
erronis
(24,533 posts)muriel_volestrangler
(106,599 posts)although the Cambrian Period is held to have started at 539. But the writing is not clear, I think. The "back by at least 4 million years" may actually be meant to imply "probably a lot more than 4 million", but again it seems unclear. I can't access the actual paper to see if they do better than "at least 4 million".
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