The Burgess Shale: Evolution's Big Bang
A storied trove of fossils from a Canadian paleontological site is yielding new clues to an explosion of life on earth
- By Siobhan Roberts
- Smithsonian magazine, August 2009, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
After a week of slim pickings at Walcott Quarry, Caron and his tired, sore team were ready to try a new location. "I'm looking forward to seeing a lot of new fossils in unexpected places," said the optimistic Caron. "One hundred years later, there are still a lot of questions, still a lot of discoveries to make!"
Caron climbed aboard a helicopter to scout nearby mountain peaks for new sites to explore in the future. He was joined by Robert Gaines, a Pomona College geologist who studies the shale millimeter by millimeter to figure out whether the various layers represent millennia of accumulated sediment or a few moments' worth deposited by storm currents. "We rely on Bob to read the book of the rocks," said Caron. From the chopper Gaines saw a number of promising spots. "I'm aroused, scientifically," he said. He was keen to get on the ground and get out his measuring tape.
The helicopter put down near Stanley Glacier, where Caron and Gaines joined the rest of the crew, who were already prospecting for fossils. It did not take long to hit pay dirt. On the first afternoon, Loxton found a fossil of a species fondly known as Creeposaurus (until it can be properly studied, identified and given its scientific name). Caron called out: "Champagne!" Only three other specimens of this tentacled, bottom-dwelling animal had ever been collected.
"Creeposaurus is a new species, but it's important for another reason as well," Caron explained. "It's helpful in understanding two animal lineages—one is like a starfish, an echinoderm, and the other is a plankton-like organism, a hemichordate. Creeposaurus may be a common ancestor and has the potential to unite these two animals that we know today."
The Stanley Glacier valley, which is shaped like an amphitheater, turned out to be the scene of a paleontological pageant. As the glacier melted, over the past few thousand years, it exposed a fresh outcrop of loose rock stretching for a mile and a half. "Extraordinary, amazing, to find so many animals here, lying around untouched from hundreds of millions of years ago," said Caron.
Over the next two weeks, he and his crew, occasionally using a diamond-bladed rock saw, would collect several hundred specimens, including what they believe to be four new species. One of them, an arthropod, was found in such profusion—appendages here, carapaces there—by so many crew members that it became a sort of site mascot the group dubbed "Stan Animal." "A very scary animal," Caron said of a specimen with spiky legs and multiple rows of teeth. "You don't want to have it in your sleeping bag at night."
After the end of the field season, Caron returned to the Royal Ontario Museum, where he swapped his worn and grubby hiking duds for laboratory whites. In the collections room, he flipped through a notebook, trying to make sense of the cans and crates full of rock that sat in a jumble at his feet. "It's a treasure chest waiting to be opened," he exulted.
Siobhan Roberts lives in Toronto. She is the author of King of Infinite Space.
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Comments (1)
Even weirder than the Burgess Shale fossils is the fact that the table mountain fossils are the same age.(e!science news) And strangely preserved like the mud slide that buried the Burgess life. Was this area involved in the upheaval that buried the Burgess? Remember at 1/2 billion y ago the equator ran from the top of Greenland thru Wyoming. 90% from what we have now. These bizarre forms were wiped out and replaced.
Posted by katesisco on February 1,2013 | 04:59 PM