Solving Mystery of Missing Animals in Fossil Record
Author: Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford
Published: 2023/06/29 - Updated: 2025/11/19
Publication Details: Peer-Reviewed, Ecology & Evolution
Category Topic: Anthropology - Related Publications
Page Content: Synopsis - Introduction - Main - Insights, Updates
Synopsis: This research, published in the peer-reviewed journal Trends in Ecology & Evolution, addresses a fundamental mystery in evolutionary science: why animals appear suddenly in the fossil record during the Cambrian period despite molecular evidence suggesting they evolved much earlier. Led by Dr. Ross Anderson from the University of Oxford's Department of Earth Sciences, the study develops a groundbreaking method to distinguish whether animals were genuinely absent from early geological periods or simply too fragile to fossilize.
By analyzing mudstone deposits using advanced spectroscopy techniques, researchers identified that antibacterial clays - particularly berthierine and kaolinite - are essential for exceptional fossil preservation, creating protective barriers around decaying tissues. When they applied this discovery to analyze Neoproterozoic rock formations with ideal preservation conditions but no animal fossils, they provided the first concrete "evidence for absence" rather than mere absence of evidence. This work is particularly valuable for anyone interested in understanding how our perception of life's history may be skewed by preservation biases, offering insights that extend beyond paleontology into how we interpret incomplete historical records - a concept relevant to fields from medical research to accessibility studies where data gaps can lead to misunderstandings about when conditions or needs first emerged - Disabled World (DW).
Defining Cambrian Period
- Cambrian Period
The Cambrian Period is the first geological period of the Paleozoic Era, and of the Phanerozoic Eon. The Cambrian lasted 53.4 million years from the end of the preceding Ediacaran Period 541 million years ago to the beginning of the Ordovician Period 485.4 million years ago. The Cambrian Period marks an important point in the history of life on Earth; it is the time when many kinds of invertebrates and the first vertebrates - fish - appeared in the fossil record. The Burgess Shale, a fossil-bearing deposit exposed in the Canadian Rockies of British Columbia, Canada, contains the best record of Cambrian animal fossils including soft-bodied forms.
Introduction
"Fossilization Processes and Our Reading of Animal Antiquity" - Trends in Ecology & Evolution.
A study led by the University of Oxford has brought us one step closer to solving a mystery that has puzzled naturalists since Charles Darwin: when did animals first appear in the history of Earth? The results have been published today in the journal Trends in Ecology & Evolution.
Main Content
Animals* first occur in the fossil record around 574 million years ago. Their arrival appears as a sudden 'explosion' in rocks from the Cambrian period (539 million years ago to 485 million years ago) and seems to counter the typically gradual pace of evolutionary change. Many scientists (including Darwin himself) believe that the first animals actually evolved long before the Cambrian period, but they cannot explain why they are missing from the fossil record.
The 'molecular clock' method, for instance, suggests that animals first evolved 800 million years ago, during the early part of the Neoproterozoic era (1,000 million years ago to 539 million years ago). This approach uses the rates at which genes accumulate mutations to determine the point in time when two or more living species last shared a common ancestor. But although rocks from the early Neoproterozoic contain fossil microorganisms, such as bacteria and protists, no animal fossils have been found.

This posed a dilemma for paleontologists: does the molecular clock method overestimate the point at which animals first evolved? Or were animals present during the early Neoproterozoic, but too soft and fragile to be preserved?
To investigate this, a team of researchers led by Dr Ross Anderson from the University of Oxford's Department of Earth Sciences have carried out the most thorough assessment to date of the preservation conditions that would be expected to capture the earliest animal fossils.
Lead author Dr Ross Anderson said:
"The first animals presumably lacked mineral-based shells or skeletons, and would have required exceptional conditions to be fossilized. But certain Cambrian mudstone deposits demonstrate exceptional preservation, even of soft and fragile animal tissues. We reasoned that if these conditions, known as Burgess Shale-Type (BST) preservation, also occurred in Neoproterozoic rocks, then a lack of fossils would suggest a real absence of animals at that time."
To investigate this, the research team used a range of analytical techniques on samples of Cambrian mudstone deposits from almost 20 sites, to compare those hosting BST fossils with those preserving only mineral-based remains (such as trilobites). These methods included energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy and X-ray diffraction carried out at the University of Oxford's Departments of Earth Sciences and Materials, besides infrared spectroscopy carried out at Diamond Light Source, the UK's national synchrotron.

The analysis found that fossils with exceptional BST-type preservation were particularly enriched in an antibacterial clay called berthierine. Samples with a composition of at least 20% berthierine yielded BST fossils in around 90% of cases.
Microscale mineral mapping of BST fossils revealed that another antibacterial clay, called kaolinite, appeared to directly bind to decaying tissues at an early stage, forming a protective halo during fossilization.
"The presence of these clays was the main predictor of whether rocks would harbor BST fossils" added Dr Anderson. "This suggests that the clay particles act as an antibacterial barrier that prevents bacteria and other microorganisms from breaking down organic materials."
The researchers then applied these techniques to analyze samples from numerous fossil-rich Neoproterozoic mudstone deposits. The analysis revealed that most did not have the compositions necessary for BST preservation. However, three deposits in Nunavut (Canada), Siberia (Russia), and Svalbard (Norway) had almost identical compositions to BST-rocks from the Cambrian period. Nevertheless, none of the samples from these three deposits contained animal fossils, even though conditions were likely favorable for their preservation.
Dr Anderson added:
"Similarities in the distribution of clays with fossils in these rare early Neoproterozoic samples and with exceptional Cambrian deposits suggest that, in both cases, clays were attached to decaying tissues, and that conditions conducive to BST preservation were available in both time periods. This provides the first "evidence for absence" and supports the view that animals had not evolved by the early Neoproterozoic era, contrary to some molecular clock estimates."
According to the researchers, the study suggests a possible maximum age to the origin of animals of around 789 million years: the youngest estimated age of the Svalbard formation. The group now intend to search for progressively younger Neoproterozoic deposits with conditions for BST preservation. This will confirm the age of rocks in which animals are missing from the fossil record because they really were absent, rather than because conditions did not enable them to be fossilized. They also intend to perform laboratory experiments to investigate the mechanisms that underpin clay-organic interactions in BST preservation.
Dr Anderson added:
"Mapping the compositions of these rocks at the microscale is allowing us to understand the nature of the exceptional fossil record in a way that we have never been able to do before. Ultimately, this could help determine how the fossil record may be biased towards preserving certain species and tissues, altering our perception of biodiversity across different geological eras."
* Animals can be defined as multicellular, eukaryotic organisms in the biological kingdom Animalia. With few exceptions, animals feed on organic matter, breathe oxygen, reproduce sexually, have specialized sense organs and a nervous system, and are able to respond rapidly to stimuli.
Insights, Analysis, and Developments
Editorial Note: The implications of this Oxford study reach far beyond settling a debate about ancient animals. By demonstrating that absence in the historical record can result from preservation conditions rather than actual absence, the research offers a methodological framework applicable to numerous fields where gaps in data have long been mistaken for gaps in reality. Just as scientists can now determine whether early animals truly didn't exist or simply left no trace, researchers studying disability history, accessibility evolution, and the experiences of marginalized populations can better assess whether historical silence represents genuine absence or merely the failure of record-keeping systems to capture certain lives and experiences. The study reminds us that what survives for posterity depends heavily on the conditions that allow preservation - whether of ancient organisms in clay or of human stories in archives - Disabled World (DW).Attribution/Source(s): This peer reviewed publication was selected for publishing by the editors of Disabled World (DW) due to its relevance to the disability community. Originally authored by Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford and published on 2023/06/29, this content may have been edited for style, clarity, or brevity.