Ottawa Citizen

New fossil sheds light on Cambrian evolution

- BOB WEBER

It was getting late and the team of paleontolo­gists excavating a previously unexplored outcrop of the Burgess Shale was ready to call it a day. A camera crew filming the dig in Kootenay National Park had already packed it in.

Then one of the team members split open a large plate of shale.

“I just remember the gasps all around,” said Joe Moysiuk of the Royal Ontario Museum. “Everyone was running to come and see what had been found. It was clearly a new animal.”

What that 2018 dig revealed was something that stood out even in the bizarre world of the Burgess Shale, an outcrop of 500-millionyea­r-old rocks in the Canadian Rockies of B.C. that is chock-a-block with fossils from the earliest days of complex life on Earth.

Most of those fossils are little-finger size. Not this one.

“We uncovered this huge carapace,” Moysiuk recalled. “The whole animal must be at least 50 cm long. This is definitely one of the largest animals that we know of from the Cambrian period.”

Titanokory­s gainesi hails from a time that predated life on land, when the seas were a giant laboratory for evolution to work out answers that plants and animals still use today. Spinal cords, eyes, exoskeleto­ns — they all first appear in the Cambrian.

“All of the major animal body plans first evolved then,” Moysiuk said.

“We see the first representa­tives of things that looked like fish, things that looked like insects and crabs. Any other animal you might dream up, it most likely had some relative from the Cambrian period.”

Not that Titanokory­s would look remotely familiar.

“These things are very alien-looking,” said Moysiuk.

The whole beastie was flattish and oblong, with gill slits toward the back, a horseshoe-shaped plate protecting its head and armoured plates underneath. Its eyes, halfway back along the body, would probably have been on stalks. It had claws out front with rakelike outgrowths.

A predator, it probably cruised the sea bottom looking for whatever tasty bits it could sweep into its mouth.

“The mouth itself is really cool,” Moysiuk said. “It looks like a pineapple slice that's lined with these sharp, inward-pointing teeth.”

Burgess Shale fossils are renowned not only for their age, but for their preservati­on. Soft body parts such as eyes are often visible. A critter's last meal is sometimes preserved in the rock.

Even for the Burgess, Titanokory­s is well-preserved.

“We have relatively complete remains,” said Moysiuk. “These fossils are very rare.”

The fossil, he said, will allow paleontolo­gists to study some of evolution's most basic questions. But whatever eventually comes from the study of Titanokory­s, Moysiuk said nothing will match the thrill of seeing its fossil emerge.

“It was one of those moments I'll never forget.”

 ?? JOE MOYSIUK / HANDOUT VIA REUTERS ?? Paleontolo­gist Jean-Bernard Caron of the Royal Ontario Museum sits above a fossil of Titanokory­s gainesi
at the Burgess Shale quarry site located in British Columbia's Kootenay National Park.
JOE MOYSIUK / HANDOUT VIA REUTERS Paleontolo­gist Jean-Bernard Caron of the Royal Ontario Museum sits above a fossil of Titanokory­s gainesi at the Burgess Shale quarry site located in British Columbia's Kootenay National Park.

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