Date: 6/01/2024 18:18:24
From: PermeateFree
ID: 2111211
Subject: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

It’s all relative.

>>Enormous for its time period, this newly discovered marine worm likely ruled the seas at the top of the food chain.


An illustration of the giant Cambrian predator that lived around 518 million years ago in what is now Greenland.

A “terror beast” marine worm with a giant jaw dominated the seas more than 500 million years ago, exquisitely preserved fossils show.

Scientists recently uncovered the fossils of the newfound species of carnivorous worm — named Timorebestia koprii, or “terror beast” — in northern Greenland and described it in a study published Wednesday (Jan. 3) in the journal Science Advances.

Existing during the early Cambrian period (541 million to 485.4 million years ago), the predator had a row of fins flanking each side of its body and a pair of long antennae. It could grow to be up to 12 inches (30 centimeters) long, making it one of the largest swimming animals in its time period, according to the study.

“Timorebestia were giants of their day and would have been close to the top of the food chain,” Jakob Vinther, a paleontologist at the University of Bristol in England, said in a statement. “That makes it equivalent in importance to some of the top carnivores in modern oceans, such as sharks and seals, back in the Cambrian period.”


The fossil of a nearly 12-inches-long Timorebestia koprii next to an illustration of it.

Discovered in sediments known as the Sirius Passet formation of Greenland, some of the Timorebestia samples were so well preserved that the scientists could analyze the worms’ digestive systems to determine some of what these carnivores were eating when they died. Most of the prey present in the worms’ guts were marine bivalved Cambrian arthropods known as Isoxys.The scientists even discovered one fossil worm with an Isoxys still in its jaw region.

Isoxys were “very common at Sirius Passet and had long protective spines, pointing both forwards and backwards,” to help them avoid being eaten, study co-author Morten Lunde Nielsen, a former doctoral student at the University of Bristol, said in the statement. “However, they clearly didn’t completely succeed in avoiding that fate, because Timorebestia munched on them in great quantities.”

By bombarding the T. koprii samples with a beam of electrons, the scientists revealed a nerve center on their belly known as the ventral ganglion. The presence of this nerve bundle, which likely helped the worms control their locomotory muscles, is unique to a living group of tiny marine worms known as arrow worms, or chaetognaths. This shows that the T. koprii are distant relatives of modern-day chaetognaths, the study authors wrote. However, one of the key differences between these ancient worms and living chaetognaths is the location of their jaws.

“Today, arrow worms have menacing bristles on the outside of their heads for catching prey, whereas Timorebestia has jaws inside its head,” study co-author Luke Parry, a paleobiologist at Oxford University, said in the statement. “Timorebestia and other fossils like it provide links between closely related organisms that today look very different.”

https://www.livescience.com/planet-earth/fossils/terror-beast-fossils-unearthed-in-greenland-are-more-than-half-a-billion-years-old

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Date: 6/01/2024 18:22:47
From: party_pants
ID: 2111212
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

PermeateFree said:


It’s all relative.

Probably a relative of Keith Richards.

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Date: 6/01/2024 18:24:47
From: OCDC
ID: 2111214
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

Food chain is out, food web is in. And I’m pretty sure they would’ve been ingested by other fauna at some stage.

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Date: 6/01/2024 18:24:55
From: roughbarked
ID: 2111215
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

party_pants said:


PermeateFree said:

It’s all relative.

Probably a relative of Keith Richards.

Nearly old enough to be his younger brother?

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Date: 6/01/2024 18:26:36
From: roughbarked
ID: 2111216
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

OCDC said:


Food chain is out, food web is in. And I’m pretty sure they would’ve been ingested by other fauna at some stage.

Maybe they were eaten by flora?

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Date: 6/01/2024 18:29:46
From: OCDC
ID: 2111217
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

roughbarked said:

OCDC said:
Food chain is out, food web is in. And I’m pretty sure they would’ve been ingested by other fauna at some stage.
Maybe they were eaten by flora?
Possibly, but my comment holds. Plants are part of the food web.

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Date: 6/01/2024 18:31:37
From: PermeateFree
ID: 2111219
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

party_pants said:


PermeateFree said:

It’s all relative.

Probably a relative of Keith Richards.

Relative:
considered in relation or in proportion to something else:

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Date: 6/01/2024 18:33:14
From: PermeateFree
ID: 2111221
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

OCDC said:


Food chain is out, food web is in. And I’m pretty sure they would’ve been ingested by other fauna at some stage.

Not at that time, nor until very much later.

Reply Quote

Date: 6/01/2024 18:47:38
From: PermeateFree
ID: 2111222
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

PermeateFree said:


OCDC said:

Food chain is out, food web is in. And I’m pretty sure they would’ve been ingested by other fauna at some stage.

Not at that time, nor until very much later.

Jawed fish did not evolve until 70 million years later.

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Date: 6/01/2024 18:47:48
From: Bubblecar
ID: 2111223
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

PermeateFree said:


OCDC said:

Food chain is out, food web is in. And I’m pretty sure they would’ve been ingested by other fauna at some stage.

Not at that time, nor until very much later.

They would have been food for bacteria both before and after death.

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Date: 6/01/2024 18:53:39
From: PermeateFree
ID: 2111225
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

Bubblecar said:


PermeateFree said:

OCDC said:

Food chain is out, food web is in. And I’m pretty sure they would’ve been ingested by other fauna at some stage.

Not at that time, nor until very much later.

They would have been food for bacteria both before and after death.

Much the same today, but in higher life forms like us, it was an apex predator.

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Date: 7/01/2024 09:07:16
From: roughbarked
ID: 2111326
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

OCDC said:


roughbarked said:
OCDC said:
Food chain is out, food web is in. And I’m pretty sure they would’ve been ingested by other fauna at some stage.
Maybe they were eaten by flora?
Possibly, but my comment holds. Plants are part of the food web.

Yes.

Reply Quote

Date: 7/01/2024 09:12:13
From: Witty Rejoinder
ID: 2111330
Subject: re: 'Terror beast' fossils unearthed in Greenland are more than half a billion years old

roughbarked said:


OCDC said:

roughbarked said:
Maybe they were eaten by flora?
Possibly, but my comment holds. Plants are part of the food web.

Yes.

And obviously juveniles would be eaten by temporarily larger other species.

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