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UK scientists help museum curators to determine Viking trade routes by the metal in their swords 1/6/2009

Study shows competition, not climate change, led to Neanderthal extinction 12/30/2008

Life on Earth got bigger in 2-million-fold leaps, says researcher 12/24/2008

Archaeological discovery: Earliest evidence of our cave-dwelling human ancestors 12/22/2008

Passage graves from an astronomical perspective 12/21/2008

Polygamy, paternal care in birds linked to dinosaur ancestors 12/20/2008

'Hobbit' fossils represent a new species, concludes anthropologist 12/18/2008

Gibbon feet provide model for early human walking 12/17/2008

Iron Age 'sacrifice' is Britain's oldest surviving brain 12/16/2008

CT scans reveal that dinosaurs were airheads 12/11/2008

Late Neandertals and modern human contact in southeastern Iberia 12/10/2008

Oetzi's last supper 12/3/2008

Evidence from dirty teeth: Ancient Peruvians ate well 12/2/2008

New excavations strengthen identification of Herod's grave at Herodium 11/30/2008

Study of oldest turtle fossil 11/29/2008

Ancient Puzzle Solved In Fossils From Canadian Rockies, Dating To Cambrian Explosion (2/24/2008)

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cambrian explosion

Illustration of what life might have been like shortly after the Cambrian explosion in what is now the Canadian Rockies. (Credit: Image courtesy of University of Leicester)
Illustration of what life might have been like shortly after the Cambrian explosion in what is now the Canadian Rockies. (Credit: Image courtesy of University of Leicester)
Geologists at the University of Leicester have solved a puzzle found in rocks half a billion years old.

Some of the most important fossil beds in the world are the Burgess Shales in the Canadian Rockies. Once an ancient sea bed, they were formed shortly after life suddenly became more complex and diverse -- the so-called Cambrian explosion -- and are of immense scientific interest.

Normally, only hard parts of ancient animals became fossilised; the bones, teeth or shells. Soft parts were rarely preserved: many plants and invertebrate animals evolved, lived for millions of years and became extinct, but left no trace in the fossil record.

The Burgess Shales preserved soft tissue in exquisite detail, and the question of how this came to happen has troubled scientists since the discovery of the fossils in 1909.

Now, painstaking work by Sarah Gabbott and Jan Zalasiewicz of the University of Leicester, with Desmond Collins of the Royal Ontario Museum, has provided an answer.

They analysed the shales millimetre by millimetre, and found that unlike most rocks of this type, they weren't slowly deposited, mud flake by mud flake. Instead, a thick slurry powered down a steep slope and instantly buried the animals to a depth where normal decay couldn't occur.

Dr Gabbott said, "Not a nice way to go, perhaps, but a swift one- and one that guaranteed immortality (of a sort) for these strange creatures."

This research has been published in the Journal of the Geological Society (2008, vol.165, pp. 307-318)

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of Leicester

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