Treptichnus pedum

Treptichnus pedum
Trace fossil classification
Ichnogenus: Treptichnus
Miller, 1889
Ichnospecies: T. pedum
Seilacher, 1955
Binomial name
Treptichnus pedum
Synonyms
  • Phycodes pedum
  • Manykodes pedum
  • Trichophycus pedum

Treptichnus pedum (formerly Phycodes pedum, Manykodes pedum by J. Dzik,[1] or most of the time named Trichophycus pedum) is regarded as the earliest widespread complex trace fossil. Its earliest appearance, around 542 mya,[2] which was contemporaneous with the last of the Ediacaran biota, is used to help define the dividing line, considered geologically at 541 mya, between the Ediacaran and Cambrian Periods.[3][4]

Treptichnus pedum has a fairly complicated and distinctive burrow pattern: along a central, sometimes sinuous or looping burrow it made successive probes upward through the sediment in search of nutrients, generating a trace pattern reminiscent of a fan or twisted rope.[5] The organism that left such traces is considered more complex than earlier Ediacaran fauna; and these trace fossils, which occur worldwide, are usually found in strata above those.[6]

Since only its burrows have been found, it is presumed that the Treptichnus animal lacked any hard anatomical features, such as shells or bones. Its morphology and relationship to modern animals is therefore unknown, and some dispute even its inclusion within the animal kingdom.[7] Despite this lack of fossil evidence, surface trails produced by modern priapulid worms exhibit the same probing morphology as Treptichnus, suggesting a close anatomical relationship between the trace-maker and modern priapulids.[8]

The name Treptichnus pedum means "turned-trail (Greek) of feet (Latin)".

References

  1. DZIK, Jerzy (2005). "Behavioral and anatomical unity of the earliest burrowing animals and the cause of the "Cambrian explosion"" (PDF). Paleobiology 31 (3): 503–521. doi:10.1666/0094-8373(2005)031[0503:BAAUOT]2.0.CO;2.
  2. Srivastava, Purnima (June 2012). "Treptichnus pedum: An Ichnofossil Representing Ediacaran - Cambrian Boundary in the Nagaur Group, the Marwar Supergroup, Rajasthan, India" (PDF). Proc. Indian natn Sci. Acad. 78 (2): 161-169. Retrieved April 8, 2016.
  3. Subcommission on Neoproterozoic Stratigraphy - URL retrieved June 22, 2009
  4. International Commission on Stratigraphy, International Chronostratigraphic Chart, 2012, http://www.stratigraphy.org/column.php?id=Chart/Time%20Scale
  5. McMenamin, Mark A.; Dianna L. McMenamin (1990) [1990-01-15]. The Emergence of Animals. Columbia University Press. ISBN 0-231-06647-3.
  6. "Life in the Cambrian". Retrieved 2006-03-09.
  7. Altermann, Wladyslaw (2002) [2002-07-01]. Precambrian Sedimentary Environments. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 0-632-06415-3.
  8. Vannier, J.; Calandra, I.; Gaillard, C.; Zylinska, A. (2010). "Priapulid worms: Pioneer horizontal burrowers at the Precambrian-Cambrian boundary". Geology 38 (8): 711–714. doi:10.1130/G30829.1.
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