Trilobite ‘Pompeii’ reveals 500-million-year-old animals preserved in exquisite detail (2024)

Trilobite ‘Pompeii’ reveals 500-million-year-old animals preserved in exquisite detail (1)

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    SCIENCE NEWS

    Some of the best three-dimensionally preserved fossil trilobites have been revealed from Morocco.

    The ancient arthropods were caught in the pyroclastic flow of a volcanic eruption that smothered the shallow sea in which they were swimming and encased them in ash for half a billion years.

    Trilobites were one of our planet’s most successful groups of animals.

    First appearing roughly 521 million years ago, they split into an incredible diversity of species ranging from just a few millimetres to over 90 centimetres long. Their hard, calcified exoskeleton is frequently well preserved in the fossil record, making trilobites some of the best studied fossil marine animals.

    Palaeontologists have been able to figure out a lot about trilobites from their exoskeletal ‘shell’, but their understanding has been limited by the relative scarcity of soft tissue preservation, including of the arthropods’ legs, mouthparts and internal organs.

    Now, researchers have described some of the best-preserved trilobite fossils ever discovered.

    The fossils represent two species that were rapidly buried by volcanic ash as they walked or rested on the floor of a shallow sea some 500 million years ago. The speed at which they were preserved and the fine nature of the ash means that the resulting three-dimensional moulds show details as small as the filaments on the trilobites’ legs and tiny commensal animals attached to their backs.

    The trilobites formed natural moulds within the ash which turned to stone, in the same way in which the eruption of Mount Vesuvius buried the unfortunate inhabitants of Pompeii and Herculaneum in 79 AD.

    Trilobite ‘Pompeii’ reveals 500-million-year-old animals preserved in exquisite detail (2)

    Dr Greg Edgecombe is a palaeontologist at the Natural History Museum who specialises in trilobites and was involved in describing these incredible new specimens.

    “I’ve been studying trilobites for nearly 40 years, but I never felt like I was looking at live animals as much as I have with these ones”, says Greg. “It’s pretty mind blowing. I’ve seen a lot of soft anatomy of trilobites, but it’s the 3D preservation here that really does it.”

    “Everybody who’s seen these images are just gobsmacked. It’s extraordinary.”

    The paper describing these incredible fossils has been published in Science.

    Perfect casts of ancient arthropods

    The fossils formed on what was once a shallow, sandy sea floor over which a whole host of trilobite species would have been scurrying about. Suddenly, a volcano on the coast erupted, sending ash plumes and molten lava into the air and a pyroclastic flow pummelling down its slopes.

    As this silica-rich current of hot gas and volcanic matter hit the sodium-rich sea, the reaction caused the water to become more acidic and new minerals to crystalline and rapidly turn to rock - or lithify.

    Trilobite ‘Pompeii’ reveals 500-million-year-old animals preserved in exquisite detail (3)

    The trilobites were likely encased within a matter of seconds. Their burial was so rapid that even the tiny animals living on them are preserved as in life. These tiny lamp shells, which were a type of brachiopod, attached to the outer surface and legs of the trilobites using a little soft tissue stalk.

    “The trilobites are encased even before the brachiopods could collapse, so the lithification was fast,” explains Greg. “There is this unappreciated discovery that volcanic ash in shallow marine settings could be a bonanza for exceptional fossil preservation.”

    As the trilobites were smothered, their final act was swallowing a mouthful of slurry, filling their guts with the volcanic ash. Over time, their bodies decayed, leaving near-perfect three-dimensional hollow moulds within the rock. The material in their guts also turned to rock, preserving a perfect cast of their digestive tract running through the natural mould.

    The specimens were imaged in a CT scanner, allowing their 3D form to be reconstructed from X-rays.

    The fine grain of the volcanic ash means that the casts show us incredible details - not only each body segment and leg, but even the hair-like structures that run along the appendages. These details have been observed in other fossil trilobites, but rarely in three-dimensions and as they would have been positioned in life.

    It is the extraordinary preservation of the mouth parts that has really excited Greg.

    Trilobite ‘Pompeii’ reveals 500-million-year-old animals preserved in exquisite detail (4)

    “We’ve never had this level of information about the appendages around the mouth,” he says. The fossils show that these trilobites had a previously unknown pair of modified appendages that sat right next to the mouth to help pass food into it. These small structures have a short antenna-like branch.”

    “The specialisation of these appendages around the mouth is something we’ve not known in trilobites previously. I think that’s partly because we’ve got this 3D preservation and see everything in situ.”

    The rarity of these fossils can’t be overstated. Whilst soft tissue from trilobites is known from around 30 of the 22,000 known species, typically they are squashed flat and often mispositioned. But even returning to the rock formation in which these specimens were discovered has so far yielded only the four studied examples with this exceptional preservation.

    “It takes a lot of work to find them,” explains Greg. “Our lead author Abderrazak El Abani has done numerous field trips in Morocco since he became aware of these fossils, working long days in the field but still not found any more. So these trilobites are very scarce.”

    Crucially, it shows us that incredibly well-preserved fossils from volcanic ash in shallow marine environments exist. Other trilobite fossils with soft tissue are thought to have formed in deeper seas, whilst these ones came from nearshore environments.

    Greg is hopeful that other rock formations that have similar origins could contain fossils with comparable levels of preservation and that people will now know to look for them.

    8

    • Volcanoes
    • Extinction
    • Fossils
    • Prehistoric

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    Trilobite ‘Pompeii’ reveals 500-million-year-old animals preserved in exquisite detail (5)

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    Trilobite ‘Pompeii’ reveals 500-million-year-old animals preserved in exquisite detail (2024)

    FAQs

    Trilobite ‘Pompeii’ reveals 500-million-year-old animals preserved in exquisite detail? ›

    'Prehistoric Pompeii' reveals 515 million-year-old sea bugs' anatomy in pristine 3D. An artistic reconstruction shows two species of trilobite that lived 515 million years ago in a shallow sea in what's now Morocco, an instant before they were buried in a flow of volcanic ash.

    Why might you find a 500 million year old trilobite fossil in the middle of a continent far from the oceans? ›

    Much of what we now know as the continents of North America, Asia, Africa and Europe were partially under sea level, allowing trilobites to become fossilized in locations presently situated hundreds of miles from the nearest prominent body of water.

    What do the fossils of trilobites reveal about these animals? ›

    Trilobites periodically shed their exoskeleton to accommodate growth; trilobite fossils sometimes preserve so-called moult configurations that show various stages in the release of the old exoskeleton and escape of the then soft-bodied animal. Moulting is another diagnostic feature of the arthropods.

    What made trilobite so special in the history of life? ›

    Because trilobites had wide diversity and an easily fossilized mineralised exoskeleton, they left an extensive fossil record. The study of their fossils has facilitated important contributions to biostratigraphy, paleontology, evolutionary biology, and plate tectonics.

    What are two important facts about trilobites? ›

    Trilobites were the first group of animals in the animal kingdom to develop complex eyes. Cambrian Period (about 500 million years ago). Trilobites lived in marine waters. Some trilobites could swim, others burrowed or crawled around on muddy sea floors.

    What was the 500 million year old fossil found? ›

    Now, researchers have described some of the best-preserved trilobite fossils ever discovered. The fossils represent two species that were rapidly buried by volcanic ash as they walked or rested on the floor of a shallow sea some 500 million years ago.

    What did the fossils in the Burgess Shale indicate that happened around 500 million years ago? ›

    The Burgess Shale contains the best record we have of Cambrian animal fossils. The locality reveals the presence of creatures originating from the Cambrian explosion, an evolutionary burst of animal origins dating 545 to 525 million years ago. During this period, life was restricted to the world's oceans.

    Why are trilobites so well preserved? ›

    Trilobite fossils are extremely common because their hard exoskeletons make it relatively easy for the animals to become fossils. But just as it's rare to discover any trace of soft-tissue preservation in dinosaurs, so it is with trilobites.

    How do trilobite fossils provide evidence of evolution? ›

    For example, spines might have evolved to put off predators such as early jawed fishes. The abundance of trilobites and the fast evolution of new species makes these extinct animals excellent index fossils, which means we can use them to help us work out the age of rocks.

    What can trilobites tell us? ›

    Geologists use trilobites in a variety of ways to help them understand how the Earth has developed. One use is in the relative dating and stratigraphical correlation of sedimentary rock successions, especially in rocks of Cambrian and early Ordovician age.

    What killed the trilobites? ›

    They died out at the end of the Permian, 251 million years ago, killed by the end Permian mass extinction event that removed over 90% of all species on Earth. They were very diverse for much of the Palaeozoic, and today trilobite fossils are found all over the world.

    Why are trilobites considered to be a very successful species? ›

    Because they evolved rapidly, and moulted like other arthropods, trilobites serve as excellent index fossils, enabling geologists to date the age of the rocks in which they are found. Abundance: Trilobites are very well-known, and possibly the second-most famous fossil group after the dinosaurs.

    Did humans evolve from trilobites? ›

    So the first trilobites most probably emerged long after chordates emerged. No. Trilobites and humans had a common ancestor — which would have been a single celled eukaryote.

    What are the unique characteristics of trilobites? ›

    Trilobites had three body lobes, two of which lay on each side of a longitudinal axial lobe. The trilobite body was segmented and divided into three regions from head to tail: the cephalon, or head region, separated from the thorax, which was followed in turn by the pygidium, or tail region.

    What is the evolutionary significance of the trilobites? ›

    Trilobite evolution is consistent with an increased premium on effective enrollment and protective strategies, and with an evolutionary trade-off between the flexibility to vary the number of trunk segments and the ability to regionalize portions of the trunk.

    How rare is it to find a trilobite fossil? ›

    A rare trilobite and a specie very rarely found complete, almost never (in less as 1 to 30 promising looking cross sections found).

    Which fossils are most common in the rock that is 500 million years old? ›

    Time correlation of Cambrian rocks has been based almost entirely on fossils. The most common fossils in Cambrian rocks are trilobites, which evolved rapidly and are the principal guide fossils for biostratigraphic zonation in all but rocks below the Atdabanian Stage or those of equivalent age.

    How are trilobite fossils found all over the world? ›

    They were very diverse for much of the Palaeozoic, and today trilobite fossils are found all over the world. Some burrowed in sediment, while others crawled over the sea floor or swam in open water.

    Could trilobites still exist in the deep ocean? ›

    These ancient arthropods filled the world's oceans from the earliest stages of the Cambrian Period, 521 million years ago, until their eventual demise at the end of the Permian, 252 million years ago, a time when nearly 90 percent of life on earth was rather suddenly eradicated.

    How is it possible for trilobite fossils to be located at various depths? ›

    **Tectonic Movement**: In other locations, trilobite fossils are discovered deep below the surface and beneath several rock layers. This can happen when tectonic forces push layers of rock, including those containing trilobite fossils, downward over time. As a result, the fossils end up buried at deeper depths.

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