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posted by janrinok on Saturday September 11 2021, @07:07PM   Printer-friendly

Massive new animal species discovered in half-billion-year-old Burgess Shale:

Palaeontologists at the Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) have uncovered the remains of a huge new fossil species belonging to an extinct animal group in half-a-billion-year-old Cambrian rocks from Kootenay National Park in the Canadian Rockies. The findings were announced on September 8, 2021, in a study published in Royal Society Open Science.

Named Titanokorys gainesi, this new species is remarkable for its size. With an estimated total length of half a meter, Titanokorys was a giant compared to most animals that lived in the seas at that time, most of which barely reached the size of a pinky finger.

"The sheer size of this animal is absolutely mind-boggling, this is one of the biggest animals from the Cambrian period ever found," says Jean-Bernard Caron, ROM's Richard M. Ivey Curator of Invertebrate Palaeontology.

Evolutionarily speaking, Titanokorys belongs to a group of primitive arthropods called radiodonts. The most iconic representative of this group is the streamlined predator Anomalocaris, which may itself have approached a meter in length. Like all radiodonts, Titanokorys had multifaceted eyes, a pineapple slice-shaped, tooth-lined mouth, a pair of spiny claws below its head to capture prey and a body with a series of flaps for swimming. Within this group, some species also possessed large, conspicuous head carapaces, with Titanokorys being one of the largest ever known.

Journal Reference:
J.-B. Caron, J. Moysiuk. A giant nektobenthic radiodont from the Burgess Shale and the significance of hurdiid carapace diversity, Royal Society Open Science (DOI: 10.1098/rsos.210664)


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  • (Score: 0, Flamebait) by Mockingbird on Sunday September 12 2021, @09:23PM (1 child)

    by Mockingbird (15239) on Sunday September 12 2021, @09:23PM (#1177309) Journal

    That is why we extract oil and gas? I always thought it was the "climate destroying profit." Hard to tell one from t'other.

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  • (Score: 1) by khallow on Monday September 13 2021, @01:34AM

    by khallow (3766) Subscriber Badge on Monday September 13 2021, @01:34AM (#1177345) Journal
    The point is not the extraction, it's the use. We aren't using those fossil fuels for transportation and energy because we like destroying the climate, whatever that is supposed to mean.