Posted on 02/01/2023 11:57:17 AM PST by Red Badger
The brain has been hiding inside a fossil fish skull and it's now revealing secrets of animal evolution.
Illustration of a small gray fish with a dark stripe down its side with an extra bit showing what its little pink brain looked like.This artist's rendering shows what Coccocephalus wildi might have looked like back when it lived over 300 million years ago. - Márcio L. Castro
A very long time ago, a fish died, was buried in sediments and eventually became fossilized. Today, 319 million years later, it's the star of a study that reveals "the oldest example of a well-preserved vertebrate brain."
University of Michigan doctoral student Rodrigo Figueroa led the study, published in the journal Nature on Wednesday. The small fish is Coccocephalus wildi, a type of ray-finned fish. Living examples of ray-finned fish include swordfish and trout. It's a diverse group made up of about 30,000 species.
Small, dark fossil fish skull next to a US penny for scale shows it's very dainty and unassuming. The fossilized skull of Coccocephalus wildi doesn't look like much from the outside. - Jeremy Marble/University of Michigan News
"This unexpected find of a three-dimensionally preserved vertebrate brain gives us a startling insight into the neural anatomy of ray-finned fish," said paleontologist Sam Giles in a University of Birmingham statement. "It tells us a more complicated pattern of brain evolution than suggested by living species alone, allowing us to better define how and when present day bony fishes evolved." Giles is a co-author of the study.
The researchers used a noninvasive CT scan -- the same technology used for medical imaging of humans -- to look inside the skull without damaging the fossil. They found a brain and cranial nerves that were about an inch (2.5 centimeters) long. The university said a dense mineral replaced the brain and nerves, preserving it "in exquisite detail."
Black and white CT scan of Coccocephalus wildi skull shows interior with small brain and nerves inside. One of the CT scan images of the Coccocephalus wildi skull from the paper. The lines point out parts of the brain inside. - Figueroa et al./Nature
We're all familiar with fossilized bones, but preservation of soft tissues like brains is much rarer. The researchers were able to compare the structure of the ancient brain with modern-day animals. All current ray-finned fish have brains that fold outward as they develop in the embryo. Coccocephalus' brain, however, folds inward. This knowledge helps scientists better understand the timeline of brain evolution in ray-finned fish.
Giles said Coccocephalus wildi's brain resembles those found in paddlefish and sturgeon, which are considered "primitive" fish, since they diverged from other ray-finned fish over 300 million years ago.
The fossil was originally found in a coal mine in England over a century ago. "With the widespread availability of modern imaging techniques, I would not be surprised if we find that fossil brains and other soft parts are much more common than we previously thought," said Figueroa. "From now on, our research group and others will look at fossil fish heads with a new and different perspective."
Biden’s not THAT old!
Enough about Biden.
They should study it in hopes of better understanding Presidential Retard
The jokes write themselves . . .
And in other news from the White House…
18. Waters looks like the Elrathia kings trilobite I have which is about the same age as the fish brain and Maxine.
Around our house, like some of our records, she is called “a moldy oldie”.
Tastes like chicken. Thanks Red Badger.
Imagine waking up to that face every day.
Did the scientists mix up the samples?
Was Joe Biden’s brain in those same samples?
5.56mm
For Joe Biden’s brain to be in those samples, it would have to exist in the first place. So, no. ;^)
LOL.
5.56mm
Oh, cool!
I was wondering where I left that.
If you could send it back to me, maybe I’ll be able to remember why I walked into this room a few minutes ago.
Same
LOL
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