Current:Home > ContactA new fossil shows an animal unlike any we've seen before. And it looks like a taco. -ProsperityStream Academy
A new fossil shows an animal unlike any we've seen before. And it looks like a taco.
View
Date:2025-04-15 07:58:52
A common ancestor to some of the most widespread animals on Earth has managed to surprise scientists, because its taco shape and multi-jointed legs are something no paleontologist has ever seen before in the fossil record, according to the authors of a new study.
Paleontologists have long studied hymenocarines – the ancestors to shrimp, centipedes and crabs – that lived 500 million years ago with multiple sets of legs and pincer-like mandibles around their mouths.
Until now, scientists said they were missing a piece of the evolutionary puzzle, unable to link some hymenocarines to others that came later in the fossil record. But a newly discovered specimen of a species called Odaraia alata fills the timeline's gap and more interestingly, has physical characteristics scientists have never before laid eyes on: Legs with a dizzying number of spines running through them and a 'taco' shell.
“No one could have imagined that an animal with 30 pairs of legs, with 20 segments per leg and so many spines on it ever existed, and it's also enclosed in this very strange taco shape," Alejandro Izquierdo-López, a paleontologist and lead author of a new report introducing the specimen told USA TODAY.
The Odaraia alata specimen discovery, which is on display at Toronto's Royal Ontario Museum, is important because scientists expect to learn more clues as to why its descendants − like shrimp and many bug species − have successfully evolved and spread around the world, Izquierdo-López said.
"Odaraiid cephalic anatomy has been largely unknown, limiting evolutionary scenarios and putting their... affinities into question," Izquierdo-López and others wrote in a report published Wednesday in Royal Society of London's Proceedings B journal.
A taco shell − but full of legs
Paleontologists have never seen an animal shaped like a taco, Izquierdo-López said, explaining how Odaraia alata used its folds (imagine the two sides of a tortilla enveloping a taco's filling) to create a funnel underwater, where the animal lived.
When prey flowed inside, they would get trapped in Odaraia alata's 30 pairs of legs. Because each leg is subdivided about 20 times, Izquierdo-López said, the 30 pairs transform into a dense, webby net when intertwined.
“Every legs is just completely full of spines," Izquierdo-López said, explaining how more than 80 spines in a single leg create an almost "fuzzy" net structure.
“These are features we have never seen before," said Izquierdo-López, who is based in Barcelona, Spain.
Izquierdo-López and his team will continue to study Odaraia alata to learn about why its descendants have overtaken populations of snails, octopi and other sea creatures that have existed for millions of years but are not as widespread now.
"Every animal on Earth is connected through ancestry to each other," he said. "All of these questions are really interesting to me because they speak about the history of our planet."
veryGood! (3414)
Related
- Shilo Sanders' bankruptcy case reaches 'impasse' over NIL information for CU star
- Millions in Haiti starve as food, blocked by gangs, rots on the ground
- 1st stadium built for professional women's sports team going up in Kansas City
- U.S. Capitol reopens doors to visitors that were closed during pandemic
- British golfer Charley Hull blames injury, not lack of cigarettes, for poor Olympic start
- West Virginia University President E. Gordon Gee given contract extension
- New film honors angel who saved over 200 lives during Russian occupation of Bucha
- Niger general who helped stage coup declares himself country's new leader
- How breaking emerged from battles in the burning Bronx to the Paris Olympics stage
- Texas QB Arch Manning sets auction record with signed trading card sold for $102,500
Ranking
- Everything Simone Biles did at the Paris Olympics was amplified. She thrived in the spotlight
- As the pope heads to Portugal, he is laying the groundwork for the church’s future and his legacy
- Win, lose or draw: How USWNT can advance to World Cup knockout rounds, avoid embarrassment
- Niger general who helped stage coup declares himself country's new leader
- Newly elected West Virginia lawmaker arrested and accused of making terroristic threats
- S.C. nurse who fatally poisoned husband with eye drops: I just wanted him to suffer
- Mar-a-Lago property manager to be arraigned in classified documents probe
- Britney Spears' Mother-in-Law Hospitalized After Major Accident
Recommendation
British swimmer Adam Peaty: There are worms in the food at Paris Olympic Village
Pee-wee Herman creator Paul Reubens dies at 70
At least 5 dead and 7 wounded in clashes inside crowded Palestinian refugee camp in Lebanon
Lori Vallow Daybell to be sentenced for murders of her 2 youngest children
'Most Whopper
Millions in Haiti starve as food, blocked by gangs, rots on the ground
The FBI should face new limits on its use of US foreign spy data, a key intelligence board says
‘Conscience’ bills let medical providers opt out of providing a wide range of care