Charnia

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

Charnia
Temporal range: Late
Ma
[1]
A cast of the holotype of Charnia masoni. Metric scale.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Petalonamae
Family: Charniidae
Genus: Charnia
Ford, 1958
Species:
C. masoni
Binomial name
Charnia masoni
Ford, 1958
Synonyms
  • Glassnerina Germs, 1973
  • Rangea grandis Glaessner & Wade, 1966 = Glaessnerina grandis
  • Rangea sibirica Sokolov, 1972 = Glaessnerina sibirica

Charnia is an extinct

fossilised specimen was found. Charnia is significant because it was the first Precambrian
fossil to be recognized as such.

The living organism grew on the sea floor, 570 to 550 million years ago, and is believed to have fed on nutrients in the water. Despite Charnia's fern-like appearance, it is not a photosynthetic plant or alga because the nature of the fossil beds where specimens have been found implies that it originally lived in deep water, well below the photic zone where photosynthesis can occur.[2]

Diversity

Several Charnia species were described but only the type species C. masoni is considered valid. Some specimens of C. masoni were described as members of genus Rangea or a separate genus Glaessnerina:

  • Rangea grandis Glaessner & Wade, 1966[3] = Glaessnerina grandis[4]
  • Rangea sibirica Sokolov, 1972 = Glaessnerina sibirica

Two other described Charnia species have been transferred to two separate genera

  • Charnia wardi Narbonne & Gehling, 2003[5] transferred to the genus Trepassia Narbonne et al., 2009[6]
  • Charnia antecedens Laflamme et al., 2007[7][8] transferred to the genus Vinlandia Brasier, Antcliffe & Liu, 2012[9]

A number of Ediacaran form taxa are thought to represent Charnia,

Shepshedia.[10]

Distribution

Charnia masoni was first described from the Maplewell Group in Charnwood Forest in England and was subsequently found in Ediacara Hills in Australia,[3][11] Siberia and the White Sea area in Russia,[12][13] and Precambrian deposits in Newfoundland, Canada.

It lived about 570-550 million years ago.[1]

Discovery

Charnia masoni fossil, Leicester Museum & Art Gallery, Leicester

Charnia masoni

Trevor Ford, a local geologist. Mason took Ford to the site; Ford published the discovery in the Journal of the Yorkshire Geological Society.[15] The holotype (the actual physical example from which the species was first described) now resides, along with a cast of the related taxon Charniodiscus, in Leicester Museum & Art Gallery
.

It has also been revealed that Tina Negus, then a 15-year-old schoolgirl, had seen this fossil a year before the boys[16] but her geography schoolteacher discounted the possibility of Precambrian fossils.[17] Mason acknowledges, and the museum's Charnia display explains, that the fossil had been discovered a year earlier by Negus, "but no one took her seriously".[18] She was recognised at the 50th anniversary celebrations of the official discovery.

Significance

Reconstruction of Charnia masoni at Museo delle Scienze in Trento.

Charnia is known from specimens as small as only 1 cm (0.39 in), and as large as 66 cm (26 in) in length.

soft corals) from 1966 onwards. Acceptance of Charnia as a Precambrian lifeform resulted in recognition of other major Precambrian animal groups, although the sea pen interpretation of Charnia has been recently discredited,[20][21] and the current "state of the art" is something of a "statement of ignorance".[22]

An alternative theory has developed, since the mid-1980s, from the work of Adolf Seilacher who suggested that Charnia belongs to an extinct group of unknown grade which was confined to the Ediacaran Period. This suggests that almost all the forms that have been postulated to be members of many and various modern animal groups are actually more closely related to each other than they are to anything else. This new group was termed the Vendobionta,[23] a clade with unknown relationship to other clades, perhaps united by its construction via unipolar iterations of one cell family.

The holotype is a major attraction at the Leicester Museum & Art Gallery. A day-long seminar in 2007 devoted to Charnia termed it "Leicester's fossil celebrity".[24]

Ecology

filter feeding or directly absorbing nutrients, and this is currently the emphasis of considerable research.[25]

The growth and development of the Ediacara biota is also a subject of continued research, and this has discredited the sea pen hypothesis. In contrast to

sea pens, which grow by basal insertion, Charnia grew by the apical insertion of new buds.[22]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Leicester's fossil celebrity: Charnia and the evolution of early life" (PDF). University of Leicester. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  2. ISSN 0031-0239
    .
  3. ^ a b Glaessner, M.F.; Wade, M. (1966). "The late Precambrian fossils from Ediacara, South Australia" (PDF). Palaeontology. 9 (4): 599.
  4. .
  5. (PDF) on 31 October 2004.
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  15. ^ Mason, Roger. "The discovery of Charnia masoni" (PDF). University of Leicester. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  16. ^ Ford, Trevor. "The discovery of Charnia". Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 12 March 2011.
  17. ^ Negus, Tina. "An account of the discovery of Charnia". Archived from the original on 23 July 2011. Retrieved 12 March 2011.
  18. ^ Mason, Roger. "The discovery of Charnia masoni" (PDF). University of Leicester. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 5 April 2016. In April 1957, I went rock-climbing in Charnwood Forest with two friends, Richard Allen and Richard Blachford ('Blach'), fellow students at Wyggeston Grammar School, Leicester. I was already interested in geology and knew that the rocks of the Charnian Supergroup were Precambrian although I had not heard of the Australian fossils. Richard Allen and I agree that Blach (who died in the early 1960s) drew my attention to the leaf-like fossil holotype now on display in Leicester City Museum. I took a rubbing and showed it to my father, who was Minister of the Great Meeting Unitarian Chapel in East Bond Street, taught part-time at University College (soon to be Leicester University) and thus knew Trevor Ford. We took Trevor to visit the fossil site and convinced him that it was a genuine fossil. His publication of the discovery in the Journal of the Yorkshire Geological Society established the genus Charnia and aroused worldwide interest. ... I was able to report the discovery because of my father's encouragement and the enquiring approach fostered by my science teachers. Tina Negus saw the frond before I did but no one took her seriously.
  19. PMID 31007942
    .
  20. .
  21. ^ Gary C. Williams. "Aspects of the Evolutionary Biology of Pennatulacean Octocorals".
  22. ^
    S2CID 83486435
    .
  23. ^ Seilacher, A. 1984. Late Precambrian and Early Cambrian Metazoa: preservational or real extinctions? 159–168. In Holland, H. D., Trendal, A. F. and Bernhard, S. (eds). Patterns of Change in Earth Evolution. Springer Verlag, New York, NY, 450 pp.
  24. ^ "Leicester's fossil celebrity: Charnia and the evolution of early life" (PDF). University of Leicester. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2021. Retrieved 5 April 2016.
  25. ^ Narbonne

External links

An article on the discovery of Charnia masoni: