Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4749784 Palaeoworld 2011 22 Pages PDF
Abstract

The Lower Cambrian Maotianshan Shale near Kunming (Southern China) not only retains beautifully preserved and diverse organisms but also documents a missing evolutionary history between living vertebrates and their amphioxus-like ancestor. Presented here are the key novelties both for the evolutionary origins of the chordates and for the evolutionary transition from amphioxus-like ancestor toward the vertebrates. The adaptation for a burrowing life style is considered a key adaptive pressure for generating novel chordate-only anatomical characters including the first axial skeleton, e.g., notochord and myotomes. The transition from amphioxus-like ancestor toward the vertebrates was presumably triggered by the way toward more active life style, resulted in the origination of numerous novel structures including neural crests, a more complex head with upper and lower lips, an active gilled pharyngeal system, a large brain, image-forming paired eyes, and a bony axial skeleton (vertebrae). The diverse limb-bearing organisms from the Lower Cambrian Maotianshan Shale arthropods representing different evolutionary stages shed light on the mysterious field of the evolutionary origins of the arthropods and reveal a grand scenario of how the arthropods paved their way through step-wise evolution from worm-like ancestor toward living crown-lineage arthropods.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Palaeontology
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