Arthropod evolution & the Cambrian Explosion – Perspective in PNAS

This week in PNAS, the ANOM Lab (Daley, Antcliffe, Drage & Pates) published a Perspective that examines multiple sources of fossil data – including exceptionally preserved BST-type fossils, shelly fossils, microfosssils and trace fossil – to describe the timing of the origin and evolution of euarthropods. By comparing the modes of preservation between the Cambrian and Precambrian, we concluded that there is no evidence for euarthropods in the Precambrian. Using this comprehensive approach, we suggest that the first appearance of euarthropods was between 537 and 550 million years ago. There was no deep Precambrian root to the origin of euarthropods, and instead this evolution played out during the first 30 to 40 million years of the Cambrian. Read about it here:

 

Original PNAS article:

Daley et al. 2018 Euarthropod evolution and the Cambrian Explosion

 

News coverage:

Mail Online article

Newsweek

PhysOrg article

Xinhua Net News

Science Daily

Eurasia Review

 

Radio interview with Allison Daley for CQFD, Radio Télévision Suisse: