从鱼到人:中国出土的古化石揭示了进化 - From fish to human: ancient fossil unearthed in China sheds light on evolution

   2022-09-29 ecns0
核心提示:在中国西南部的重庆市和贵州省,在两个新发现的志留纪早期(约4.39亿至4.36亿年前)的化石层中发现了一批保存完好的鱼类化石。科学家表示,这项研究可以为包括人类在内的下颌动物的兴起和多样化提供深入的见解,改写“从鱼类到人类”的进化故事。由古脊椎动物和古人类研究所朱敏领导的研究团队
A collection of well-preserved fish fossils were unearthed in two newly discovered fossil beds from the early Silurian Period - around 439 to 436 million years ago - in Southwest China's Chongqing Municipality and Guizhou Province.Scientists said it could provide insights into the rise and diversification of jawed animals, including humans, rewriting the evolutionary story of "from fish to human."The research team led by Zhu Min, from the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), adopted new technologies and methodologies including high-precision CT (Computed Tomography), big data analysis and hydrodynamic analogy. Using these methods, they presented the world for the first time the oldest teeth from any jawed vertebrate, and what used to be completely unknown - the body structure and anatomy of the oldest jawed vertebrate, the Global Times learned from the research team on Wednesday.Their findings provide solid evidence for scientific issues such as "how fish evolved into humans" and renew humanity's knowledge of the history of the evolution of jawed vertebrates, according to the institute.  Jawed vertebrates make up more than 99.8 percent of modern vertebrates, including humans. These jawed vertebrates, also known as gnathostomes, are thought to have originated around 450 million years ago. The emergence and rise of jawed vertebrates is believed to mark a key innovation "from fish to humans," and many vital organs and body structures of humans could date back to the early evolutionary history of jawed vertebrates.However, the scarcity of fossil evidence from this era makes it hard to reconstruct the early evolutionary history of jawed vertebrates. Previously, the earliest articulated jawed fish fossils identified to date were from around 425 million years ago. Hence, there has been a huge gap in the fossil record of the early jawed vertebrates, spanning at least 30 million years from the Late Ordovician through most of the Silurian.To fill in this gap, which has been dubbed "a persisting major gap in our paleontological record" by the famous paleontologist Alfred Romer, Zhu's team spent the past decade visiting more than 200 Silurian rock beds in China where there might be fish fossils.They eventually discovered the Chongqing Biota, which dates back 436 million years - the world's only early Silurian Lagerstätte. It preserves complete, "head-to-tail" jawed fishes, providing a peerless chance to peek into the proliferating "dawn of fishes," according to the institute.Their finds included placoderms, an extinct group of armored prehistoric fish, which were the earliest known jawed vertebrates and chondrichthyans, a group of cartilaginous fish such as sharks and rays. The dominant species was a roughly 3 cm long placoderm given the name Xiushanosteus mirabilis. This fish displays a combination of features from major placoderm subgroups that sheds light on the evolution of the skulls of living jawed vertebrates. A chondrichthyan named Shenacanthus vermiformis has a body shape similar to other cartilaginous fish, but it is found to have armor plates more commonly associated with placoderms. These discoveries reveal previously unknown diversification in this period.Zhu told the Global Times on Wednesday that "the unearthing work continues to yield remarkable materials. The Chongqing Lagerstätte, like the Chengjiang and Jehol biotas, will become a world-famous paleontological heritage site and provide key evidence for how the extraordinary diversity of the jawed vertebrates we see today rose." "It's really an awesome, game-changing set of fossil discoveries. It rewrites almost everything we know about the early history of jawed animal evolution," said John Long, former president of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology [2014-2016], who teaches at Flinders University, Australia.The Guizhou depository dates back some 439 million years and contains sequences of sedimentary layers from the distant Silurian Period [from around 445 to 420 million years ago]. It has produced spectacular fossil finds, including isolated teeth identified as belonging to a new species named Qianodus duplicis of primitive jawed vertebrates. Called after the ancient name of Guizhou, Qianodus possessed peculiar spiral-like dental elements carrying multiple generations of teeth that were added throughout the life of the animal. The discovery of Qianodus provides tangible proof for the existence of toothed vertebrates and shark-like dentition patterning 14 million years earlier than previously thought.Silurian vertebrate localities in Guizhou, and those elsewhere outside China, have been of great interest to paleontologists studying the origins and early diversification of vertebrates. "What puzzled the researchers was the absence of teeth or other recognizable dental elements," said Qiang Li, one of the authors of the study and a lead scientist of the early vertebrates research group at Qujing Normal University. "Now Qianodus provides us with the first tangible evidence for teeth from this critical early period of vertebrate evolution."The findings will be published in the journal Nature on Wednesday in four articles including a cover story.A collection of well-preserved fish fossils were unearthed in two newly discovered fossil beds from the early Silurian Period - around 439 to 436 million years ago - in Southwest China's Chongqing Municipality and Guizhou Province.Scientists said it could provide insights into the rise and diversification of jawed animals, including humans, rewriting the evolutionary story of "from fish to human."The research team led by Zhu Min, from the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and Paleoanthropology of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), adopted new technologies and methodologies including high-precision CT (Computed Tomography), big data analysis and hydrodynamic analogy. Using these methods, they presented the world for the first time the oldest teeth from any jawed vertebrate, and what used to be completely unknown - the body structure and anatomy of the oldest jawed vertebrate, the Global Times learned from the research team on Wednesday.Their findings provide solid evidence for scientific issues such as "how fish evolved into humans" and renew humanity's knowledge of the history of the evolution of jawed vertebrates, according to the institute.  Jawed vertebrates make up more than 99.8 percent of modern vertebrates, including humans. These jawed vertebrates, also known as gnathostomes, are thought to have originated around 450 million years ago. The emergence and rise of jawed vertebrates is believed to mark a key innovation "from fish to humans," and many vital organs and body structures of humans could date back to the early evolutionary history of jawed vertebrates.However, the scarcity of fossil evidence from this era makes it hard to reconstruct the early evolutionary history of jawed vertebrates. Previously, the earliest articulated jawed fish fossils identified to date were from around 425 million years ago. Hence, there has been a huge gap in the fossil record of the early jawed vertebrates, spanning at least 30 million years from the Late Ordovician through most of the Silurian.To fill in this gap, which has been dubbed "a persisting major gap in our paleontological record" by the famous paleontologist Alfred Romer, Zhu's team spent the past decade visiting more than 200 Silurian rock beds in China where there might be fish fossils.They eventually discovered the Chongqing Biota, which dates back 436 million years - the world's only early Silurian Lagerstätte. It preserves complete, "head-to-tail" jawed fishes, providing a peerless chance to peek into the proliferating "dawn of fishes," according to the institute.Their finds included placoderms, an extinct group of armored prehistoric fish, which were the earliest known jawed vertebrates and chondrichthyans, a group of cartilaginous fish such as sharks and rays. The dominant species was a roughly 3 cm long placoderm given the name Xiushanosteus mirabilis. This fish displays a combination of features from major placoderm subgroups that sheds light on the evolution of the skulls of living jawed vertebrates. A chondrichthyan named Shenacanthus vermiformis has a body shape similar to other cartilaginous fish, but it is found to have armor plates more commonly associated with placoderms. These discoveries reveal previously unknown diversification in this period.Zhu told the Global Times on Wednesday that "the unearthing work continues to yield remarkable materials. The Chongqing Lagerstätte, like the Chengjiang and Jehol biotas, will become a world-famous paleontological heritage site and provide key evidence for how the extraordinary diversity of the jawed vertebrates we see today rose." "It's really an awesome, game-changing set of fossil discoveries. It rewrites almost everything we know about the early history of jawed animal evolution," said John Long, former president of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology [2014-2016], who teaches at Flinders University, Australia.The Guizhou depository dates back some 439 million years and contains sequences of sedimentary layers from the distant Silurian Period [from around 445 to 420 million years ago]. It has produced spectacular fossil finds, including isolated teeth identified as belonging to a new species named Qianodus duplicis of primitive jawed vertebrates. Called after the ancient name of Guizhou, Qianodus possessed peculiar spiral-like dental elements carrying multiple generations of teeth that were added throughout the life of the animal. The discovery of Qianodus provides tangible proof for the existence of toothed vertebrates and shark-like dentition patterning 14 million years earlier than previously thought.Silurian vertebrate localities in Guizhou, and those elsewhere outside China, have been of great interest to paleontologists studying the origins and early diversification of vertebrates. "What puzzled the researchers was the absence of teeth or other recognizable dental elements," said Qiang Li, one of the authors of the study and a lead scientist of the early vertebrates research group at Qujing Normal University. "Now Qianodus provides us with the first tangible evidence for teeth from this critical early period of vertebrate evolution."The findings will be published in the journal Nature on Wednesday in four articles including a cover story.
 
标签: Sci-tech
反对 0举报 0 评论 0
 

免责声明:本文仅代表作者个人观点,与好速译英语翻译(本网)无关。其原创性以及文中陈述文字和内容未经本站证实,对本文以及其中全部或者部分内容、文字的真实性、完整性、及时性本站不作任何保证或承诺,请读者仅作参考,并请自行核实相关内容。
    本网站有部分内容均转载自其它媒体,转载目的在于传递更多信息,并不代表本网赞同其观点和对其真实性负责,若因作品内容、知识产权、版权和其他问题,请及时提供相关证明等材料并与我们留言联系,本网站将在规定时间内给予删除等相关处理.

  • 中国在大规模人工智能模型方面取得进展 - China
    一家研究机构在一份罕见的公开声明中表示,中国已经开发了至少79个大型人工智能模型,每个模型的参数都超过10亿。OpenAI的人工智能聊天机器人ChatGPT在全球范围内引起了轰动。行业专家表示,美国和中国引领了此类模型的全球发展,但中国仍需缩小与美国在该领域的差距。中国已有14多个省级地区为该领域的研发做出了贡献
    06-01 Sci-tech
  • 中国空间站现在是什么样子的? - What does the
    中国空间站(CSS)由三个模块和三艘船组成。周二,神舟十六号载人飞船通过对接端口与空间站的天和核心舱从下方对接。空间站在其上方约400公里处绕地球运行。天和核心模块的另外两个对接端口分别位于前部和后部,与神舟十五号载人飞船和天舟六号货运飞船分别对接,核心舱有两个靠港
    06-01 Sci-tech
  • 北京论坛展示数百项创新成果 - Hundreds of inn
    一位官员在本周举行的2023 ZGC论坛上表示,北京经济技术开发区(也称为北京电子城)在2022年开发了211种新产品和技术,其中许多填补了国内空白。来自北京电子城的约40家企业带来了他们的新产品和新技术,在论坛展区展示最新科技成果。区内企业现有发明专利14686项,增长27.9%
    05-31 Sci-tech
  • 新院士评选标准公布 - Criteria for new academ
    中国科学院和中国工程院启动了新院士的申请程序,这是中国授予科学家的最高头衔。这两所科学院于周三发布了对新院士的指导方针和要求。注册中心每两年扩大一次,最终名单通常在当年年底公布。根据中国科学院的说法,今年的新成员应该来自基础科学的重点科学学科
    05-31 Sci-tech
  • 大会促进国家科幻进步 - Convention promotes n
    周一晚,2023年中国科幻大会在北京首钢园区隆重开幕,这是今年国家级国际科技峰会中关村论坛的重要组成部分。“科幻小说正以其独特的魅力越来越受到公众的关注,并吸引着科技界人士的积极参与。”中国秘书处副秘书长舒炜说
    05-31 Sci-tech
  • 脑机技术进军全国 - Brain-computer tech on ma
    中国在相关领域申请了约35%的全球专利,领先于美国和日本。Brain计算机接口技术在中国已经不仅仅是一种假设现象,在研发和应用方面取得了一些势头,尤其是在中国最新呼吁支持尖端行业的情况下,在周二结束的中关村论坛上,政府官员和行业专家表示。他们是在中关村总工程师赵志国之后发表上述评论的
    05-31 Sci-tech
  • 宇航员在天宫空间站核心舱会面 - Astronauts me
    神舟十六号载人飞船于周二抵达轨道,开始在天宫空间站工作。在神舟十六号飞船上,任务指挥官景海鹏少将、航天工程师朱阳柱上校和该任务的科学有效载荷专家、第一位进入太空的中国公民桂海潮教授,由20层楼高的长征二号F运载火箭发射,于上午9点31分从酒泉萨发射升空
    05-31 Sci-tech
  • 神舟十六号载人期待挑战 - Shenzhou XVI crew l
    周一,神舟十六号航天飞行总指挥景海鹏表示,他的机组人员已经做好准备,有信心使他们即将到来的任务取得圆满成功。“我们将是天宫空间站进入应用和开发阶段以来第一批在空间站内生活和工作的机组人员。我的机组人员包括一名航天器飞行员、一名航天工程师和一名科学有效载荷专家。这意味着我们将面临更重、更困难的任务。”
    05-30 Sci-tech
  • 宇航员在发射仪式后前往火箭 - Astronauts head
    周二凌晨,中国第11次载人航天飞行——神舟十六号的三名宇航员在位于中国西北戈壁滩的酒泉卫星发射中心的居民楼前举行了送别仪式,随后前往发射塔,此次任务的科学载荷专家桂海潮教授向指挥部徐学强将军报告
    05-30 Sci-tech
  • 大数据是高科技发展的关键 - Big data key to h
    贵州一直在推动行业成为其社会和经济目标的支柱。官员和专家在2023年中国国际大数据产业博览会上表示,中国重视建立数据基础系统和更好地利用数据资源,将释放海量数据资源的价值,为数字经济的高质量发展奠定坚实基础,贵州省副省长郭锡文说,数据是
    05-30 Sci-tech
点击排行