The content describes the discovery of a late-Ediacaran fossil, Helicolocellus cantori, from the Dengying Formation in South China, dated around 551-539 million years ago. This fossil is reconstructed as a large, stemmed benthic organism with a goblet-shaped body over 0.4 m in height, and a body wall consisting of at least three orders of nested grids defined by quadrate fields, resembling a Cantor dust fractal pattern.
The lattice structure is interpreted as an organic skeleton comprising orthogonally arranged cruciform elements, architecturally similar to some hexactinellid sponges, although the latter are built with biomineralized spicules. A Bayesian phylogenetic analysis resolves H. cantori as a crown-group sponge related to the Hexactinellida.
This discovery challenges the prevailing view that sponge fossils only appear in the Cambrian period, as it confirms that sponges diverged and existed in the Precambrian as non-biomineralizing animals with an organic skeleton. The authors also question the validity of biomineralized spicules as a necessary criterion for the identification of Precambrian sponge fossils, considering that siliceous biomineralization may have evolved independently among sponge classes.
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by Xiaopeng Wan... 於 www.nature.com 06-05-2024
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-024-07520-y深入探究