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1 in of bilaterians at 600-700 Mya (during the Ediacaran).
2 st evidence for animals back into the latest Ediacaran.
3 nequivocal animal fossils first occur in the Ediacaran.
4 ssible control on oceanic oxygenation in the Ediacaran.
5 e persisted since the early Cambrian or late Ediacaran.
6 lity to biomineralize, had deep roots in the Ediacaran.
7 rian diversification were established in the Ediacaran.
8 r, leading to diversity loss in the terminal Ediacaran.
11 The first animals appear during the late Ediacaran (572 to 541 Ma); an initial diversity increase
13 r ecological success of metazoans during the Ediacaran (635 to 541 Ma) and Cambrian (541 to 488 Ma) p
14 glacial Cryogenian (659 to 649 Ma) and early Ediacaran (635 to 590 Ma) age exhibit large positive and
16 of low-diversity, evolutionarily static, pre-Ediacaran acanthomorphs; (ii) radiation of the high-dive
18 metazoan-dominated paleocommunities occur in Ediacaran age (~ 565 million years old) strata in Newfou
20 of complex macroscopic life are recorded in Ediacaran-aged siliciclastic deposits as exceptionally w
21 st in the origin of streptophytes during the Ediacaran and another in the ancestor of land plants in
24 ificant change in oxygen content through the Ediacaran and Cambrian periods, sharply constraining the
26 ds leads us to challenge the notion that the Ediacaran and Cambrian worlds were markedly distinct, an
27 ional radiations that extended from the late Ediacaran and continued through the early Palaeozoic.
28 sphere had rapidly emerged during the latest Ediacaran and earliest Cambrian (~20 million years), fol
29 likely to have diverged between the terminal Ediacaran and earliest Cambrian, heralding the exuberant
30 res in diverse animal groups during the late Ediacaran and early Cambrian periods likely resulted fro
31 the early Ediacaran, Eumetazoa in the middle Ediacaran, and Bilateria in the upper Ediacaran, with ma
32 However, fossil bilaterians are rare in the Ediacaran, and no definitive ecdysozoan body fossils are
35 ing that local environments, where a diverse Ediacaran assemblage is preserved in situ as nodules and
38 sent information on primary producers in the Ediacaran based on biomarker molecules that were extract
41 Arkarua is added to the growing number of Ediacaran benthic suspension feeders, suggesting that th
42 unctional biology, the Dengying form adds to Ediacaran biodiversity, places key constraints on the ec
44 ontroversial interpretation of the enigmatic Ediacaran biota of the late Precambrian as giant protist
45 Although the taxonomic affinities of the Ediacaran biota remain uncertain, a conservative interpr
51 nct Ediacaran genera, it is striking that no Ediacaran body fossils have been confidently assigned to
53 are present immediately below the top of the Ediacaran but are strikingly absent from the overlying C
54 esent a multi-proxy paleoredox study of late Ediacaran (ca. 560-551 Ma) shales hosting the Miaohe Kon
55 of marine invertebrates associated with the Ediacaran-Cambrian (578-510 Ma) diversification of Metaz
56 four key intervals in marine ecosystems: the Ediacaran-Cambrian (635-485 million years ago), the Ordo
57 eochemical proxy and N isotope record of the Ediacaran-Cambrian boundary preserved in intra-shelf bas
59 diversifications at scales ranging from the Ediacaran-Cambrian explosion of animal life and the inva
60 he evolutionary events documented during the Ediacaran-Cambrian interval coincide with geochemical ev
61 with many crown-phyla originating across the Ediacaran-Cambrian interval or elsewise fully within the
63 l as their trace element compositions for an Ediacaran-Cambrian sequence in the Lower Yangtze basin,
64 genome, a history that perhaps began during Ediacaran-Cambrian time but was not completed until the
66 frondose body plans also survive beyond the Ediacaran-Cambrian transition, perhaps due to the greate
68 tages are rare and restricted largely to the Ediacaran-Cambrian, providing direct insight into develo
69 eep-ocean oxygenation occurred in the middle Ediacaran, coinciding with the onset of widespread marin
70 diacaran biotas and the discovery of several Ediacaran crown-Metazoa prompt recalibration of molecula
71 cal redox conditions proposed previously for Ediacaran deep oceans and helps to explain the patchy te
73 arbonaceous mudstones/shales of the terminal Ediacaran Dengying Formation in Tongshan, Hubei, South C
74 currences from a comprehensive survey of 720 Ediacaran-Devonian units and show that the establishment
75 As predicted by this hypothesis, the later Ediacaran disappearance of LOEM taxa coincides with geoc
76 ies that there is no simple relation between Ediacaran diversity and the carbon isotopic composition
78 gus-like microfossils preserved in the basal Ediacaran Doushantuo Formation (~635 Ma) in South China.
83 f distinct microbial communities in the late Ediacaran ecosystems, and suggest that blooms of oxygeni
84 has been invoked as a driving mechanism for Ediacaran environmental change, possibly linked with evo
85 n distinguishes these fossils from other pre-Ediacaran eukaryotes and contributes to growing evidence
86 e hypothesize that the distribution of early Ediacaran eukaryotes likely tracked redox conditions and
87 mate Metazoa to have originated in the early Ediacaran, Eumetazoa in the middle Ediacaran, and Bilate
88 des positive evidence for the absence of pre-Ediacaran eumetazoans and strongly supports the veracity
89 long-term rise of oxygen and restricting the Ediacaran expansion of macroscopic oxygen-demanding anim
90 he first coincides with the emergence of the Ediacaran fauna, including large, motile bilaterian anim
95 emphasizing the pivotal insights provided by Ediacaran fossils in documenting the early evolutionary
96 t from and complementary to that provided by Ediacaran fossils in terminal Proterozoic sandstones and
97 soils, is compatible with observations that Ediacaran fossils were similar in appearance and preserv
98 extant stoloniferous organisms suggests that Ediacaran frondose taxa were likely clonal and resurrect
100 the identification of more than 100 distinct Ediacaran genera, it is striking that no Ediacaran body
101 ions(4-8), the producers of most of the late Ediacaran ichnofossils are unknown, which has resulted i
102 y was already being utilised during the late Ediacaran in the earliest-diverging eumetazoan taxa repr
105 and environmentally tolerant members of the Ediacaran macrobiota [6] and dominated deep-marine ecosy
108 ur Re-Os ages suggest that the appearance of Ediacaran macrofossils in northwestern Canada is identic
110 omputational flow simulations to explore how Ediacaran marine animal forests influenced their surroun
113 Island Formation that are probably global-an Ediacaran matground ecology, a Fortunian matground/firmg
119 s Shale-type preservation is uncommon in the Ediacaran, mouldic Ediacara-type preservation provides i
120 ritized soft tissue in Namacalathus from the Ediacaran Nama Group, Namibia, which follows the underly
121 ion to the heterogeneous nature of the early Ediacaran nearshore marine environments in which early a
122 ide new insights into the oxygenation of the Ediacaran ocean and the stepwise restructuring of the ca
124 nt a detailed spatial and temporal record of Ediacaran ocean chemistry for the Doushantuo Formation i
126 mical evidence support an oxygenation of the Ediacaran oceans (635-542 million years ago), roughly co
127 d States suggest that long-term oxidation of Ediacaran oceans resulted in progressive depletion of a
128 d that only after approximately 551 Ma (when Ediacaran oceans were pervasively oxidized) did evolutio
130 )(9) Typified by fossil assemblages from the Ediacaran of Mistaken Point, Newfoundland,(8)(,)(10)(,)(
131 is supported by ichnofossils from the latest Ediacaran or early Cambrian left by a plausible nematoid
132 Here we report geochemical data from early Ediacaran organic-rich black shales ( approximately 635-
133 e a previously unrecognized life mode for an Ediacaran organism and arguably the oldest known example
137 hypotheses and test the redox-sensitivity of Ediacaran organisms, here we present a high-resolution l
139 eport new magnetostratigraphic data from the Ediacaran Ouarzazate Group in the Anti-Atlas Mountains o
145 ented by various trace fossils in the latest Ediacaran Period (550-541 Ma), suggesting that the earli
150 arbonate carbon-isotope excursion during the Ediacaran Period (635 to 542 million years ago), accompa
151 mospheric pO(2) increases by ~50% during the Ediacaran Period (635-541 Ma), reaching ~0.25 of the pre
152 oscopic eukaryotes are rarely older than the Ediacaran Period (635-541 million years (Myr)), and thei
153 he Precambrian period, their record from the Ediacaran period (635-542 million years ago) is controve
155 marine phosphorus concentrations during the Ediacaran Period (about 635-539 million years ago) has b
156 p, Sultanate of Oman, that cover most of the Ediacaran period (approximately 635 to approximately 548
157 e the fossil of a bilaterian of the terminal Ediacaran period (dating to 551-539 million years ago),
159 s the rarity of fine-grained deposits in the Ediacaran Period and bridges an important gap between tr
160 f the enigmatic Precambrian organisms in the Ediacaran Period grew large and stood tall above the sea
165 d in aquatic continental settings during the Ediacaran Period, when complex life co-evolved with a ri
166 his innovation probably occurred in the late Ediacaran period-as evidenced by an abundance of trace f
176 vide that separates the "Boring Billion" and Ediacaran periods, with the former characterized by a pr
177 rpreted as algal cysts or phycomata, but the Ediacaran populations differ from modern algal analogs i
181 first records, to our knowledge, of typical Ediacaran rangeomorph fronds with Burgess Shale-type pre
183 chemical record provides evidence for a late Ediacaran rise in oxygen, though likely after the origin
184 st fossils of animal-like organisms occur in Ediacaran rocks that are approximately 571 million years
185 24-nbc and 24-secbc in well-preserved early Ediacaran rocks, and the coelution of these compounds wi
186 study describes a fossilized ecdysozoan from Ediacaran rocks, extending the body fossil record for th
188 lly, delta(238)U values match other terminal Ediacaran sections, indicating widespread marine euxinia
189 gh relative abundance of these biomarkers in Ediacaran sediments from 635-541 million years (Myr) ago
194 ently evolved mineralization during the late Ediacaran through the Ordovician (approximately 550 to 4
196 xtensive trace-fossil record from the latest Ediacaran to Cambrian Age 2, spanning about 20 million y
197 ause of its relatively high abundance in pre-Ediacaran to Early Cambrian sedimentary rocks and oils.
199 ocean and atmosphere systems during the late Ediacaran to the early Cambrian has been suggested from
200 Delta(13)C(carb-org) occurred from the late Ediacaran to the early Cambrian, suggesting a substantia
205 imate the origins of arthropods to be in the Ediacaran, while most other deep nodes date to the Cambr
206 middle Ediacaran, and Bilateria in the upper Ediacaran, with many crown-phyla originating across the
208 onstraints on depositional conditions of the Ediacaran Yangtze platform that host the earliest animal