Large Acosmia maotiania Priapulid Worm from Chengjiang Biota

Acosmia maotiania

Phylum Priapulida

Geological Time: Early Cambrian (~525 million years ago)

Size: 76 mm long

Fossil Site: Chengjiang: Quiongzhusi Section, Yu’anshan Member, Heilinpu Formation, Mafang, Anning, Kunming, Yunnan Province, China


Acosmia maotiania Priapulid Worm from Chengjiang Some specimens of Acosmia maotiania have been found like this one tightly curved, suggesting it may have lived in a U shaped burrow. This is a monospecfic genus, only known from the Chengjiang Biota. This Cambrian priapulid worm preserved here in exquisite detail is a unique specimen of life from 525 million years ago.

Discovered in 1984, the Chengjiang Biota now ranks as the most diverse faunal fossil assemblage of all the Burgess Shale like deposits. It is also some 10 million years older than the Burgess Shale. Like the Burgess Shale, non-mineralized soft tissue parts are often extraordinarily well preserved with high resolution as aluminosilicate films, sometimes with oxidized iron content. Various taphonomic processes leading extensive preservation of soft tissue have been proposed, including rapid death by asphyxia followed by rapid burial in anoxic sediment undisturbed by turbidity. The Chengjiang biota is dominated by phyla Arthropoda and Porifera. There are seven lobopodians, more than any other Lagerstätte that some scientists elevate to phylum rank, and seven members of the extinct phylum Vetulicolia. Members or potential members of phyla Priapulida, Nematomorpha, Hyolitha, Hemichordata, Echinodermata, Ctenophora, Chordata, Cnidaria, Chaetognatha, and Brachiopoda are found. A large number of enigmatic animals of uncertain affinity are found as well, some of which may represent failed evolutionary experiments, or even new phyla that did not persist for long in the early Cambrian, or were rapidly replaced by more derived forms. Among the diverse Maotianshan Shales fauna, of utmost important are the putative early chordates, particularly Haikouella, potentially an ancestor to or the earliest craniate chordate. Myllokunmingia and Haikouichthys are interpreted as early Craniata, and possibly very primitive agnathids, the progenitor of the fishes and all vertebrates.

Also see: Chengjiang Biota Chengjiang Fossils Cambrian Explosion

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