Title: The Cambrian Explosion
1The Cambrian Explosion
- Rare Earth, Chapter 7
- (Ward and Brownlee)
2Introduction
- for first 4 By only primitive life had developed
on Earth - at 545 My plant and animal species suddenly
increased dramatically, fossils from 500 My are
widespread and abundant - rate of evolution and diversity has never been
equaled since - what was special about this event?
Many figures from Bentons book
3Reminder - Precambrian
4Reminder - Fossils
5 Fossils
Fossils can form on land, especially in soft
muddy conditions such as the shores of lakes and
river bottoms.
6 Fossils
- Land organisms may become embedded in soft
sedimentary deposits that later become buried,
compressed, and possibly folded, heated, or
transported great distances - Marine organisms naturally fall to the ocean
bottom at the end of their lives, or can be
buried by cataclysmic events (earthquakes,
turbidity currents, etc.) - As long as the rock is not melted, it can
reappear millions (or billions) of years later
bearing the imprints of the organisms (fossils)
7 Reefs
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9 Reefs
10Reminder - Biological Classification
species
family
phyla
kingdom
domain
Eukaryota!
11When did the CE Take Place?
Ediacaran (late Precambrian EON, or late
Proterozoic) ERA 565-543 My Cambrian (PERIOD) or
Paleozoic (ERA) 543-490 My
Age estimates of the Ediacaran, Cambrian, and
Early Ordovician (International Subcommision on
Cambrian Stratigraphy)
12What was the CE?
- CE marked by numerous large fossils
- in many locations, large trilobites appear
suddenly in the stratigraphic sequence, with no
small or intermediate sized precursors - challenge to Darwins theory of continuous
evolution - fossils became the age markers for geology,
worldwide - geologists encountered sequences with no fossils,
interbedded with sequences of abundant fossils
13 what?
- base of Cambrian used to be marked as first
trilobites, not the first trace of animal
behavior - Darwin claimed there must be pre-cursor fossils,
but never found them - now we know that precursors were abundant, but
not well enough developed to produce fossils - rocks now dated more precisely by radioactive
means, so geological strata can be given absolute
ages - Ward and Brownlee consider the CE as a milestone
marker for complex life in the galaxy
14What Animals were Involved in the Cambrian
Explosion?
- CE took place in the shallow oceans,
stromatolites had been consumed by higher
eukaryota
15543 My
490 My
16Four Stages of DiversityI - Ediacarans
- these were soft bodies jellyfish, worms, sea
anemones and soft corals - primitive in the sense of few body parts
- discovered in 1940 (Ediacaran Hills of
Australia), dated at - some very large (up to 40), varied in shape
(Figure 7.1) - thought by many to be fore-runners of modern
animals (Simon Conway Morris), but others think
they are related to plants, fungi, or lichens - later found to be world-wide distribution
- possibly an extinct side branch of evolution
- no evidence they were the source of food for
other Eukaryota enigmatic relationship with
other Cambrian animals
17Ediacarans
What was life like 560 million years ago? The
Vendian marks the first appearance of a group of
large fossils collectively known as the "Vendian
biota" or "Ediacara fauna."
18Ediacarans
- Fossils from the Ediacara Hills
- On the left is Arkarua, a small disc-shaped
animal that may be the oldest echinoderm. - At center is an unusual disc-shaped form with
three-part (triradial) symmetry. Named
Tribrachidium heraldicum, its affinities are
still mysterious, although distant relationships
have been proposed with either the Cnidaria or
the Echinodermata. - On the right is the fossil Spriggina, a possible
relative of the arthropods.
Photos of Arkarua and the Ediacara site by
Lisa-ann Gershwin
19Ediacaran Fauna
20II - Trace Fossils and Shelly Fossils
- these are not true fossils, only impressions of
their movements - demonstrated locomotion, possibly wormlike
- many details lacking, they seem to be an
intermediate phase in the CE - Also many small creatures up to ½ inch long, with
mineralized skeletons (true fossils), Shelly
Fossils
21Small Shelly Fauna
- Cambrian fossiliferous strata in Siberia, China,
Europe, and Australia have yielded an unexpected
range of well-preserved phosphatic microfossils. - These microfossils have become familiar as the
"small shelly fossils."
22Continents during Cambrian
- After the breakup of Rodinia (1400 800 My) the
continental fragments moved apart - Two new supercontinents were in the making
Gondwana and Laurentia - The process of plate tectonics, responsible for
this motion, will be discussed in Chapter 9
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25III - Trilobite Faunas
- this group is the best known of the Cambrian
fossils trilobites, brachiopods, mollusks and
echinoderms - ages approx 530 My 500 My
- trilobites were spiny, hard shelled animals with
large eyes that crawled on the sea bed - others were immobile coral-like animals
(archeocyathids) that formed reefs, as others do
today - seemed to have become extinct at about 500 My
- Burgess Shale is the most famous location of
Cambrian fossils, where a whole cliff of sediment
collapsed onto the sea floor and buried the
creatures (even the softer parts) - The remarkable fossils of Chenjiang, of latest
Early Cambrian age, are just now being described
in detail.Â
26Burgess Shale, British Columbia Canada
NB This is not the Burgess Shale!
27Burgess Shale, British Columbia Canada
Mount Wapta is the peak visible in the distance.
The escarpment in the Cathedral Formation is
visible just a few metres beyond the edge of the
quarry on the left. It occurs at the contact
between the white dolomite and the grey
slate/shale of the Stephen Formation. If you have
access to older photographs of the Walcott
quarry, it is worth comparing them to this photo
-- the quarry has doubled in size as a result of
continued work in the last few years, mainly by
Des Collins at the Royal Ontario Museum.
http//www.geo.ucalgary.ca/macrae/current_project
s.html
28- This photo shows details of the bedding within
the Burgess Shale. - The bedding occurs a the scale of a few
centimetres, and consists mostly of graded beds. - The yellowish bands are slightly calcareous,
while the darker grey bands are more pelitic
(clayey). - Both lithologies are very fine grained (silt size
grains or smaller). - These lithological differences are obvious only
where the weathering of the face of the quarry
has altered the carbonate-rich beds. - The graded beds represent individual
sediment-input events, possibly representing
storms that disturbed muddy sediment high on the
escarpment, and caused it to rain down into the
deeper water at this location, burying and
smothering organisms carried along for the ride.
The scale bar is 30 centimetres.
29- This is the largest of several species of
trilobites found in the Burgess Shale, some of
which have been preserved with soft appendages. - This specimen is missing its left free cheek (on
the head), but its skeleton is otherwise
complete, and I think one of the posterior
antennae is present, but it is not easily visible
in the photograph. - The orange colour is produced by iron oxides.
- This specimen was wetted for the photograph.
30 Chenjiang
- The remarkable fossils of Chenjiang, of latest
Early Cambrian age, are just now being described
in detail. - The fossils occur in rocks of the Qiongzhusi
Formation, cropping out at Maotianshan near
Chengjiang, Yunnan Province, South China (fig. 1)
where they were accidentally discovered in 1984.
Fig. 2 Eoredlichia intermedia with preserved
antennae and mid-gut diverticula (dark blobs in
the anterior part of the rhachis). Qiongzhusi
Formation, Chengjiang. Image courtesy of Dr.
Gerd Geyer,  Institut für Paläontologie,
Bayerische Julius-Maximilians-Universität,
Würzburg, Germany.
31 Chengjiang Microdictyon
- It is not only the diversity and early appearance
in the fossil record which makes the Chengjiang
assemblage fabulous, but also the fine
preservation which offers the opportunity to
learn more about the morphology of these early
creatures. - One of the most outstanding examples might be
Microdictyon, the isolated sclerites of which
were known from numerous localities on various
continents, but none of the specialists had any
idea how this creature could have been organized. - The discovery of these net-like scales of
Microdictyon on a worm-like animal resolved the
question.
32Was the Cambrian Explosion Inevitable?
- The Darwinian theory of evolution rests on two
assumption (1) that all life came from a common
ancestor, and (b) that various species descended
from this ancestor by a process of modification - evolution does not necessarily imply that life
evolves continuously to more and more complex
organisms - the Archaea and Bacteria have not evolved to
greater complexity - the Eukarya have evolved extensively, on this
planet, to form the basis of all plant and animal
life (including ourselves) - it appears from Earths record, that forming
animal life is the hardest part of evolution
33 Inevitable?
- evolution appears to have proceeded by long
periods of stability and then sudden dramatic
changes - in 40 My all the elements of complex animal life
seemed to have formed (Figure 7.2) - evolution produced only a relatively few body
plans PHYLA (about 30 for all the tens of
millions of animal species on Earth today) - is this special for Earth, or are other
possibilities founds on other planets? - no new phyla (body plans) have appeared since the
end of the Cambrian, in fact there were more
phyla then ( 100) than now
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35What if Anything Triggered the Cambrian
Explosion?
- Scientists seek to understand whether genetic
development dominates evolution, or whether
environment plays the crucial role (sounds
familiar?)
36Environmental Causes
- Oxygen reached a critical value
- after the global glaciati0on, the level of O2
passed a threshold that enabled animals to
develop hard skeletons - collagen (fingernail material) might have formed
earlier, but calcium and silicon based shells and
skeletons required an oxygen rich atmosphere
37 Environmental Causes
- Abundant Nutrients became available
- particularly important nutrients are phosphorous,
nitrates and iron - previously these had been buried in the bottom
sediments - perhaps plate tectonics (the break up of Rodinia)
allowed these minerals to be re-cycled into the
mid-ocean ridges
38 Environmental Causes
- - Temperatures moderated after the last deep
freeze - the second cycle of temperatures accompanied the
deep freeze of 600 My - temperatures became warm enough to trigger the
diversity - homo sapiens also appeared after a glaciation -
the last Pleistocene that ended 20 000 years ago - sea level changes probably significantly affected
the CE
39 Environmental Causes
- Inertial Interchange Event
- some scientists (including R. Ripperdan) believe
that a profound change accompanied by a 90 degree
change in continental positions relative to the
spin axis - so the continents at the equator and the poles
were exchanged - evidence comes from paleomagnetism- the study of
the position of the Earths magnetic field with
time - the motion of the continents during such an event
could have been rapid (15 My) and this would have
changed the climatic conditions dramatically - theory is consistent with distribution of Carbon
isotopes (different forms of elemental carbon)
associated with release of organic carbon in
sediments
40 Environmental Causes
- All of them?
- Authors contend that if all environmental
conditions are required to be present, then the
CE might be a very rare planetary event!
41Biological Causes
- Hard skeletal systems are essential
- development of a skeleton is difficult and
requires change in respiration mechanism - higher oxygen levels required for skeletons
- is this not the same as environmental factor?
- the second cycle of temperatures accompanied the
deep freeze of 600 My
42 Biological Causes
- - Conditions favorable for larger sizes
- larger sizes, enabled by the environmental
factors, were crucial to biological development
43Consumers - size matters!
44 Biological Causes
- The predation hypothesis
- evolutionary development was accelerated by the
appearance of predators that forced greater
diversity (skeletons, mobility, etc.)
45Is the Cambrian Explosion Simply an Artifact of
the Fossil Record?
- do we see the CE only because of the appearance
of skeletal forms in many phyla that had already
been established? - this does not avoid the fact that there was an
abrupt development of hard parts that later
became fossils - the many phyla that use shells should have
evolved only after the development of shells.
46Cambrian Explosion, Cambrian Cessation
-
- why were there no new body plans developed after
the CE? - were all ecological niches occupied by the
Cambrian trilobite fauna, leaving no further
development possible? - but, even after later extinctions, when large
numbers of species disappeared, no new phyla
developed - what made the CE so special?
- perhaps after later extinctions, there were
enough representative of the various phyla to
re-populate the planet - or perhaps there is some critical complexity in
DNA that prevents further evolution a sobering
thought!
47Diversity and Disparity
- diversity refers to the number of species
present, and their relative abundance - disparity is the number of distinct body plans,
types, or forms (phyla) - in the CE there were lots of phyla, but few
species (variations of each) - Stephen Jay Gould remarks about the significance
of this fact - is this the way evolution would work elsewhere in
the galaxy? - Gould believes disparity was at its maximum in
the CE. Conway Morris believes that it has been
increasing intermittently (Figure 7.3)
48 Disparity
49After the Cambrian Explosion the Evolution of
Diversity
- ecosystems changed along with the progression
from prokaryota to eukaryota - two other periods of diversification have been
identified the Ordovician (following the
Cambrian) and the Tertiary (after the 65 My
extinction) - are such episodes the normal pattern of galactic
evolution?
50Relevance to the Frequency of Life on Other
Planets
- if Earth is typical, then the CE required an
oxygenating atmosphere and then a large number of
phylogenetic (biological) changes - these require time (how much?) and a hospitable
planetary surface without major catastrophes
(mass extinctions)