The Herald

‘Vital link’ Highlands fossil find is billion years old

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A Billion-year-old fossil which could prove a new link in the evolution of animals has been found in the Highlands.

Scientists led by the University of Sheffield and the US’S Boston College found the microfossi­l at Loch Torridon in north-west Scotland.

The fossil – described and formally named Bicellum Brasieri in a research paper published in Current Biology – contains two distinct cell types and could be the earliest multicellu­lar animal ever recorded.

Professor Charles Wellman is one of the lead investigat­ors of the research from the University of Sheffield’s Department of Animal and Plant Sciences.

He said: “The origins of complex multicellu­larity and the origin of animals are considered two of the most important events in the history of life on Earth – our discovery sheds new light on both of these.

“We have found a primitive spherical organism made up of an arrangemen­t of two distinct cell types, the first step towards a complex multicellu­lar structure, something which has never been described before in the fossil record.

“The discovery of this new fossil suggests to us that the evolution of multicellu­lar animals had occurred at least one billion years ago and that early events prior to the evolution of animals may have occurred in freshwater like lakes rather than the ocean.”

The fossil reveals new insight into the transition of single-celled organisms to complex multicellu­lar animals. Its “exceptiona­l preservati­on” allowed the scientists to analyse it at a cellular and subcellula­r level.

The team now hopes to examine the deposits from Torridonia­n for more fossils which could provide further insight into the evolution of multicellu­lar organisms.

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