Welcome to the IKCEST
Paleontologists find a ridiculously armored Cambrian worm

It basically looks like a weapon: the fossil of a worm-like animal from the Cambrian period has been presented by scientists, and it’s as armored as it gets.

Credit: An artist’s reconstruction of Eokinorhynchus rarus, a 535-million-year-old fossil from China that is closely related to the ancestor of modern animal phylum Kinorhyncha, which is a member of moulting animals that also include the arthropods and nematods. Eokinorhynchus rarus is only a few millimetre in length. It is the first fossil kinorhynch unearthed from the rock record. Credit: Dinghua Yang at Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology

Credit: An artist’s reconstruction of Eokinorhynchus rarus, a 535-million-year-old fossil from China that is closely related to the ancestor of modern animal phylum Kinorhyncha, which is a member of moulting animals that also include the arthropods and nematods. Eokinorhynchus rarus is only a few millimetre in length. It is the first fossil kinorhynch unearthed from the rock record.
Credit: Dinghua Yang at Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology

The Cambrian was definitely one of the strangest geological and biological stages in Earth’s history; it’s not only that it was 500 million years ago, but the Cambrian explosion was firing at all cylinders. The Cambrian explosion was a (relatively) short evolutionary event during which most major animal phyla appeared. Basically, life was trying to fill out all the available ecosystem niches, and many extremely strange creatures emerged. Such is the case with Eokinorhynchis rarus.

Eokinorhynchis rarus has five pairs of large bilaterally placed spines on its trunk and may be related to a group of creatures called kinorhynchs. Kinorhynchs (also called mud dragons for some reason) are a phylum of small (1 mm or less) marine invertebrates that are widespread in mud or sand at all depths (except extreme ones). However, unlike these creatures, our Eokinorhynchis is heavily armored and has larger spines – but it may be an ancestor of the mud dragons.

The body is divided into three sections: a head, a neck and a trunk. These are some of the earliest creatures found with segmented bodies, so they could provide clues on how body segmentation emerged. Shuhai Xiao and colleagues at the describe several fossils, including E. rarus from the early Cambrian period and offer their expertise in Nature.

 

Original Text (This is the original text for your reference.)

It basically looks like a weapon: the fossil of a worm-like animal from the Cambrian period has been presented by scientists, and it’s as armored as it gets.

Credit: An artist’s reconstruction of Eokinorhynchus rarus, a 535-million-year-old fossil from China that is closely related to the ancestor of modern animal phylum Kinorhyncha, which is a member of moulting animals that also include the arthropods and nematods. Eokinorhynchus rarus is only a few millimetre in length. It is the first fossil kinorhynch unearthed from the rock record. Credit: Dinghua Yang at Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology

Credit: An artist’s reconstruction of Eokinorhynchus rarus, a 535-million-year-old fossil from China that is closely related to the ancestor of modern animal phylum Kinorhyncha, which is a member of moulting animals that also include the arthropods and nematods. Eokinorhynchus rarus is only a few millimetre in length. It is the first fossil kinorhynch unearthed from the rock record.
Credit: Dinghua Yang at Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology

The Cambrian was definitely one of the strangest geological and biological stages in Earth’s history; it’s not only that it was 500 million years ago, but the Cambrian explosion was firing at all cylinders. The Cambrian explosion was a (relatively) short evolutionary event during which most major animal phyla appeared. Basically, life was trying to fill out all the available ecosystem niches, and many extremely strange creatures emerged. Such is the case with Eokinorhynchis rarus.

Eokinorhynchis rarus has five pairs of large bilaterally placed spines on its trunk and may be related to a group of creatures called kinorhynchs. Kinorhynchs (also called mud dragons for some reason) are a phylum of small (1 mm or less) marine invertebrates that are widespread in mud or sand at all depths (except extreme ones). However, unlike these creatures, our Eokinorhynchis is heavily armored and has larger spines – but it may be an ancestor of the mud dragons.

The body is divided into three sections: a head, a neck and a trunk. These are some of the earliest creatures found with segmented bodies, so they could provide clues on how body segmentation emerged. Shuhai Xiao and colleagues at the describe several fossils, including E. rarus from the early Cambrian period and offer their expertise in Nature.

 

Comments

    Something to say?

    Log in or Sign up for free

    Disclaimer: The translated content is provided by third-party translation service providers, and IKCEST shall not assume any responsibility for the accuracy and legality of the content.
    Translate engine
    Article's language
    English
    中文
    Pусск
    Français
    Español
    العربية
    Português
    Kikongo
    Dutch
    kiswahili
    هَوُسَ
    IsiZulu
    Action
    Related

    Report

    Select your report category*



    Reason*



    By pressing send, your feedback will be used to improve IKCEST. Your privacy will be protected.

    Submit
    Cancel