The Ediacaran biota (also known as Vendian biota, Vendian forms, Vendian fauna(s), Vendobionta or Vendozoa) are a group of ancient lifeforms that are found in rocks of the Ediacaran Period, a bit older than the Cambrian faunas that represent the oldest (shelled) fossils of classical paleontology.
The original descriptions came from the Ediacaran faunas of South Australia. Similar faunas found in Namibia had been previously described, but their great age had not been appreciated. Similar fossils were found later in Brazil, Antarctica, Newfoundland, the Canadian Maritimes, North Carolina, England, Canada's Northwest Territories, the western United States, Scandinavia, the White Sea, Siberia, and Ural region of Russia, Poland, and elsewhere.
Movement traces are known for some organisms, such as Dickinsonia, Kimberella, and Yorgia. These, and similar fossils, are often interpreted as being ancestral to Phanerozoic phyla - especially the arthropods. It is commonly noted how Spriggina and Parvancorina resemble trilobites. Some other fossils, e.g. Charnia appear to be or have holdfasts. They include frond-like forms (e.g. the rangeomorphs), disks with various ornamentations, what appear to be air mattress-like forms, and other unlikely shapes. They were originally thought to be simple precursors of more modern forms, and a few elements of the fauna still look like possible precursors of such later forms as arthropods and molluscs. But most appear to belong to some evolutionary sidetrack. It has been proposed that they constitute an ancient phylum, the Vendobionta, that largely died out just before the beginning of the Cambrian. Another commonly cited possibility is that the frond-like fossils belong to the phylum cnidaria and are related to modern sea pens.
Well known Ediacaran forms include Arkarua, Charnia, Dickinsonia, Ediacaria, Marywadea, Onega, Yorgia and Pteridinium. The full list runs to 100 or more taxa. Some of those named are rare but interesting for one reason or another. Others are widely distributed.
As time has passed, assemblages of the Ediacara biota have, if anything, become more rather than less enigmatic.
The term "Vendobionta", which is also used, is not a description of the fauna, but rather the name of a separate kingdom where German palaeontologist Dolf Seilacher put many of the fossils. This has been extremely controversial, and has not gained widespread acceptance.
The Ediacaran fossils are the oldest definite multicellular fossils, but there are even older fossils known. Well-dated fossils of bacteria are found in cherts 3460 million years and probable bacterial mats known back to 3600 million years. 3800 million year old graphite in metasediments from Western Greenland is thought to be of organic origin. Many very old proposed fossils such as Eozoon have subsequently been rejected as naturally occurring pseudo-fossils. The oldest current candidates for early multicelled life are 2000 million-year old tracks from West Texas, 1000 million-year old tracks from India and Australia, and 700 million-year old worm impressions from China.
Fossils | Ediacaran biota | Vendobionten | Fauna de Ediacara | エディアカラ動物群
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the
"Ediacaran biota".
Home Page • arts • business • computers • games • health • hospitals • home • kids & teens • news • physicians • recreation• reference • regional • science • shopping • society • sports • world