2017
DOI: 10.1144/jgs2016-142
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The Weng'an Biota (Doushantuo Formation): an Ediacaran window on soft-bodied and multicellular microorganisms

Abstract: The Weng'an Biota is a fossil Konservat-Lagerstätte in South China that is c. 570 – 609 myr old and provides an unparalleled snapshot of marine life during the interval in which molecular clocks estimate that animal clades were diversifying. It yields fossils that are three-dimensionally preserved in calcium phosphate with cellular and sometimes subcellular fidelity. The biota includes candidates for the oldest animals in the fossil record, including embryonic, larval and adult forms. W… Show more

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Cited by 54 publications
(67 citation statements)
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References 90 publications
(153 reference statements)
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“…Synchrotron‐radiation X‐ray tomography of Lower Cambrian microfossils reveals details of interior structures such as Markuelia spines and a possible digestive tract (Donoghue, Bengtson et al., ), and Chen et al. contributed synchrotron X‐ray microtomography and propagation phase contrast‐based imaging analysis of numerous Doushantuo microfossils as indicative of an apparent diverse metazoan community (Chen et al., ), although claims of metazoan affinities remain controversial (Cunningham et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Synchrotron‐radiation X‐ray tomography of Lower Cambrian microfossils reveals details of interior structures such as Markuelia spines and a possible digestive tract (Donoghue, Bengtson et al., ), and Chen et al. contributed synchrotron X‐ray microtomography and propagation phase contrast‐based imaging analysis of numerous Doushantuo microfossils as indicative of an apparent diverse metazoan community (Chen et al., ), although claims of metazoan affinities remain controversial (Cunningham et al., ).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This assemblage of reworked phosphoclasts includes apparent cell clusters that have been variously interpreted as metazoan diapause-stage embryos, sulfide-oxidizing bacteria, and protists (Bailey, Joye, Kalanetra, Flood, & Corsetti, 2007;Cunningham et al, 2011;Huldtgren et al, 2011;Xiao, Zhang, & Knoll, 1998;Yin et al, 2007). Some characteristics claimed to represent evidence of animal affinities, including reductive cell division, Y-shaped cell junctions, and the enrobement of some specimens in textured enveloping precipitates, are not diagnostic characteristics (Cunningham, Vargas, Yin, Bengtson, & Donoghue, 2017) even if they do represent primary biological features. In addition, it is now known that some features initially interpreted as biological in origin, may instead result from non-biological processes, including those that result from diagenetic changes following initial authigenic mineral precipitation (Bengtson & Budd, 2004;Cunningham et al, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Following best practise for digital morphology (Davies et al, 2017), our tomographic datasets and models are available from http://dx.doi.org/ 10.5523/bris.2v3sw3xjkaum724prs1ziow4u0. We follow Yin et al (2004) and Cunningham et al (2017) in considering Megasphaera and Parapandorina as junior synonyms of Tianzhushania.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The possible causal relationship between oxygenation events and early animal evolution is a topic of broad interest. Molecular clock and sponge biomarker studies suggest that multicellular animals diverged in the Cryogenian Period (~720–635 Myr ago) or earlier (Cunningham et al, ; Sperling and Stockey, ; Zumberge et al, , but see Nettersheim et al, ). However, Cryogenian animals may have been morphologically simple sponge‐like creatures and likely required little oxygen (Mills, Lenton, & Watson, ; Sperling et al, ).…”
Section: Global Marine Redox Change Drove the Rise And Fall Of The Edmentioning
confidence: 99%