Stone baked fossils give up secrets
8 Dec 2008 by Evoluted New Media
Scientists are getting closer to solving a 500-million year old mystery - how do fossils heated to over 300°C in the Earth’s while at the mercy of tectonic forces survive?
Scientists are getting closer to solving a 500-million year old mystery - how do fossils heated to over 300°C in the Earth’s while at the mercy of tectonic forces survive?
The 500 million year-old fossils of the Burgess Shale in Canada, discovered over a century ago, provide remarkable insights into the dawn of animal life. Yet, their existence is a paradox - the fossils have been buried deep in the Earth’s crust and heated to over 300°C before being thrust up by tectonic forces to form a mountainous ridge in the Rockies.
Usually such extreme conditions are thought to destroy fossils. But, in the Burgess Shale the detail of soft tissues has been preserved.
Now scientists of the universities of Cambridge and Leicester and the British Geological Survey, have solved this riddle. They have shown that as the delicate organic tissues of these fossils were heated deep within the Earth, they became the site for mineral formation. The new minerals, forged at these tremendous depths, picked out intricate details such as gills, guts and even eyes.
Alex Page of the University of Cambridge said: “This provides a whole new theory for how fossils form. The deep heating may not have cremated them, but it certainly left them stone baked.”
Once an ancient sea bed, the Burgess shale were formed shortly after life suddenly became more complex and diverse – the so-called Cambrian explosion – and are of immense scientific interest.
Normally, only hard parts of ancient animals became fossilised; the bones, teeth or shells. Soft parts are rarely preserved - many plants and invertebrate animals evolved, lived for millions of years and became extinct, but left no trace in the fossil record. The Burgess Shales preserved soft tissue in exquisite detail, and the question of how this came to happen has troubled scientists since the discovery of the fossils in 1909.
The research is published in the journal Geology.