Vendian biota
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The Vendian biota (also known as Ediacaran biota, Vendian forms, Vendian fauna(s), Vendobionta or Vendozoa) are a group of ancient lifeforms that are found in rocks of the Ediacaran Period, a bit older than the Cambrian faunas that represent the oldest (shelly) fossils of classical paleontology.
The name comes from the Ediacara Hills (derived from an Indigenous Australian term for a place near water) of South Australia, thus being the only geologic period to have a name originating in the southern hemisphere. In the Ediacara Hills, on the western margin of the Flinders Ranges, peculiar Precambrian fossils were found by the geologist Reg Sprigg in 1946, and studied by Martin Glaessner starting in the 1950s. Glaessner at first thought that the creatures were primitive versions of animals such as corals, sea-pens, and worms better known from later times. In subsequent decades, many more Precambrian fossils have been found in the Flinders Ranges of South Australia. Related fossils have been found in dozens of outcrops on all continents, and collectively these have come to be known as the Ediacara biota. Especially important deposits have been found in the White Sea area of Russia, in southwestern Africa, in northwestern Canada, and in south eastern Newfoundland.
Image:Charnia wardi.jpg The original descriptions came from the Ediacaran faunas of South Australia. Similar faunas found in Namibia had been previously described, but their great age had not been appreciated. Similar fossils were found later in Brazil, Antarctica, Newfoundland, the Canadian Maritimes, North Carolina, England, Canada's Northwest Territories, the western United States, Scandinavia, the White Sea, Siberia, and Ural region of Russia, Poland, and other places.
These now extinct forms are generally segmented or frondlike with no visible organs other than holdfasts in some varieties. Many of these fossils are difficult to interpret. They are probably entirely late Precambrian, although several supposed Vendian-like forms have been identified from the Cambrian, but many of these have since been redescribed as trace fossils or pseudofossils. Many believe that some or all of the Vendians are precursors to one or more modern phyla that arose in the Cambrian.
The Vendian "animals" (if they were animals) are probably too large and complex to be single-celled, and seem to be without exception diploblastic. They universally lack preserved mouths, any organs, or appendages. Symmetries may be two-, three-, four-, or even five-fold. Movement traces are known for some organisms, such as Dickinsonia, Kimberella, and Yorgia. Some appear to be or have holdfasts. They include frond-like forms (e.g. the rangeomorphs), disks with various ornamentations, what appear to be air mattress-like forms, and other unlikely shapes. They were originally thought to be simple precursors of more modern forms, and a few elements of the fauna still look like possible precursors of such later forms as arthropods and molluscs. But most appear to belong to some evolutionary sidetrack. It has been proposed that they constitute an ancient phylum, the Vendobionta, that largely died out just before the beginning of the Cambrian.
Well known Vendian forms include Arkarua, Charnia, Dickinsonia, Ediacaria, Marywadea, Onegia, Yorgia and Pteridinium. The full list runs to 100 or more taxa. Some of those named are rare but interesting for one reason or another. Others are widely distributed.
As time has passed, assemblages of the Ediacara biota have, if anything, become more rather than less enigmatic.
- The earliest Ediacara fossils, 575 million years ago, were fronds attached to the seafloor by discs.
- Frond-like fossils such as Charniodiscus resemble living seapens.
- Some, called Rangeomorphs, show fractal branching (meaning that the branches are self-similar).
- Various disc-like fossils appear to have been creatures like sea-anemones (Mawsonities, Hiemalora and Inaria) and sponges (Palaeophragmodictya).
- One of the largest and most distinctive Ediacara animals was a flattened, oval-shaped and segmented worm-like form called Dickinsonia that could grow to a metre or more long.
- Arkarua, a tiny five-sided disc, is like a sea-star.
- About 560 million years ago, trace fossils like worm burrows appear in the fossil record together with small body fossils that have bilateral symmetry. A few of these fossils Kimberella, Parvancorina and Spriggina seem to be possible precursors to Cambrian forms.
Many of the best known Ediacaran creatures appear to be immobile bags, annulate disks, fronds, and air-mattress-like shapes that have no obvious relationship to later forms. There is considerable controversy about the nature of many Ediacaran forms, with some having been classified in as many as six kingdoms.
The Ediacaran biota is occasionally referred to as the Vendian biota but this has been used more rarely in recent times. This usage echoes the former name Vendian, by which the Ediacaran period was known in Russia and some other parts of the world prior to the official naming of the period in 2004. Modern usage tends toward using Ediacaran to describe the full faunal range including algae, sponges, and all other life forms of the late Precambrian. A term Vendobionta, which is also used, is not a description of the fauna, but rather the name of a separate Kingdom into which many of the fossils were placed by German palaeontologist Dolf Seilacher. This has been extremely controversial, and has not gained widespread acceptance.
There are even older fossils known. Well dated fossils of bacteria are found in cherts as old as 3460 million years and probable bacterial mats known back to 3600 million years. 3800 million year old graphite in metasediments from Western Greenland is thought to be of organic origin. Many very old proposed fossils such as Eozoon have subsequently been rejected as naturally occurring pseudo-fossils. The oldest current candidates for early multicelled life are 2000 million year old tracks from West Texas, 1000 million year old tracks from India and Australia, and 700 million year old worm impressions from China.
(There is considerable debate as to whether any of these may be traces of complex animals. They may be imprints of "bags of cells" -- confederations of single-celled creatures moving in concert -- or even inorganic geological anomalies, though most geological opinion tends to the latter. The Ediacara biota is accepted as the earliest record of animal life by most palaeontologists).