Soft‐Bodied Fossils Are Not Simply Rotten Carcasses – Toward a Holistic Understanding of Exceptional Fossil Preservation |
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Authors: | Luke A. Parry Fiann Smithwick Klara K. Nordén Evan T. Saitta Jesus Lozano‐Fernandez Alastair R. Tanner Jean‐Bernard Caron Gregory D. Edgecombe Derek E. G. Briggs Jakob Vinther |
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Affiliation: | 1. School of Earth Sciences, University of Bristol, Wills Memorial Building, Bristol, UK;2. Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, ON, Canada;3. Department of Earth Sciences, The Natural History Museum, London, UK;4. School of Biological Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK;5. Department of Geology and Geophysics, Yale University, New Haven, CT, USA;6. Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, New Haven, CT, USA;7. Departments of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology and Earth Sciences, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada |
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Abstract: | Exceptionally preserved fossils are the product of complex interplays of biological and geological processes including burial, autolysis and microbial decay, authigenic mineralization, diagenesis, metamorphism, and finally weathering and exhumation. Determining which tissues are preserved and how biases affect their preservation pathways is important for interpreting fossils in phylogenetic, ecological, and evolutionary frameworks. Although laboratory decay experiments reveal important aspects of fossilization, applying the results directly to the interpretation of exceptionally preserved fossils may overlook the impact of other key processes that remove or preserve morphological information. Investigations of fossils preserving non‐biomineralized tissues suggest that certain structures that are decay resistant (e.g., the notochord) are rarely preserved (even where carbonaceous components survive), and decay‐prone structures (e.g., nervous systems) can fossilize, albeit rarely. As we review here, decay resistance is an imperfect indicator of fossilization potential, and a suite of biological and geological processes account for the features preserved in exceptional fossils. |
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Keywords: | decay experiments exceptional preservation Lagerstä tten taphonomy |
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