Stop the Press!! – Ediacaran Life, on land!

Retallack, G. J., 2013: Ediacaran life on land.
–Nature: Vol. 493, #7430, pp. 89-92 [doi: 10.1038/nature11777]
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature11777

Abstract:

Ediacaran (635–542 million years ago) fossils have been regarded as early animal ancestors of the Cambrian evolutionary explosion of marine invertebrate phyla, as giant marine protists and as lichenized fungi. Recent documentation of palaeosols in the Ediacara Member of the Rawnsley Quartzite of South Australia4 confirms past interpretations of lagoonal–aeolian deposition based on synsedimentary ferruginization and loessic texture. Further evidence for palaeosols comes from non-marine facies, dilation cracks, soil nodules, sand crystals, stable isotopic data and mass balance geochemistry. Here I show that the uppermost surfaces of the palaeosols have a variety of fossils in growth position, including Charniodiscus, Dickinsonia, Hallidaya, Parvancorina, Phyllozoon, Praecambridium, Rugoconites, Tribrachidium and ‘old-elephant skin’ (ichnogenus Rivularites). These fossils were preserved as ferruginous impressions, like plant fossils, and biological soil crusts of Phanerozoic eon sandy palaeosols. Sand crystals after gypsum and nodules of carbonate are shallow within the palaeosols, even after correcting for burial compaction. Periglacial involutions and modest geochemical differentiation of the palaeosols are evidence of a dry, cold temperate Ediacaran palaeoclimate in South Australia. This new interpretation of some Ediacaran fossils as large sessile organisms of cool, dry soils, is compatible with observations that Ediacaran fossils were similar in appearance and preservation to lichens and other microbial colonies of biological soil crusts, rather than marine animals, or protists.

Cheers!

–Mikko

One thought on “Stop the Press!! – Ediacaran Life, on land!

  1. LS Post author

    When looking for a modern analog of the Retellack’s Terrestrial Ediacara, one was reminiscing this:

    http://www.anbg.gov.au/lichen/ecology-habitats-arid.html
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lichens_in_Namibia
    http://journals.cambridge.org/action/displayAbstract;jsessionid=EA8E1F0A2B44C6AE13354A82BF606CE0.journals?fromPage=online&aid=271694
    http://www.jstor.org/stable/2389909

    http://www.nottingham.ac.uk/biology/resources/crittenden/images/pc-4a.jpg

    There is actually very nice footage of them in the BBC’s series “Private Life of Plants”, too bad no Youtube-clips has been made… 🙂

    Cheers!

    –Mikko

Comments are closed.