St. Petersburg Times
 tampabaycom
tampabay.com

Print storySubscribe to the Times

Science

In tiny sea creature, researchers find oldest male fossil

By Associated Press
Published December 5, 2003

WASHINGTON - A fossil of a small sea creature extracted from a 425-million-year-old British rock formation is the oldest unequivocally male fossil known, researchers say.

The animal, a new member of a large species group called ostracode, was buried under volcanic ash, which mineralized and retained an image of its soft body parts. That unique preservation enabled researchers to construct a highly detailed three-dimensional picture of the animal after digging the fossil from a rock bed in Herefordshire.

Details revealed include gills, eyes, limbs designed for swimming and the oldest known male organ in the fossil record. It was this last that led researchers to name the new species, Colymbosathon ecplecticos, which is Greek for "amazing swimmer with large penis."

"The whole animal is amazing," David Siveter, a researcher at the University of Leicester, said in a statement. He is first author of a study appearing this week in the journal Science.

Thomas M. Cronin, a U.S. Geological Survey geologist, said the animal is the oldest male in the fossil record and the specimen contains images of soft parts that could only be guessed at by analyzing other 425-million-year-old fossils.

"Any fossil with soft parts from (430-million to 400-million years ago) is unusual," he said. "They've been able to basically dissect and describe features we never see in fossils."

Siveter and his team used a new technique that combined thin-film cutting and data storage in a computer.

They removed the rock containing the fossil and then cut extremely thin shavings through the remains. Each shaving was then photographed and stored in a computer. Later, the researchers were able to electronically reassemble the slices and create a three-dimensional image of the animal, along with its soft parts.

That, Cronin said, has never been done before for such an ancient animal.

Modern relatives of C. ecplecticos are found in virtually every aquatic environment on Earth. They are bivalves, but are more closely related to crabs and lobsters than to clams or oysters.

C. ecplecticos was about two-tenths of an inch at its widest dimension and its soft body parts closely resemble those of its modern relatives.


World and national headlines
  • Officials promise to find assistant U.S. attorney's killer
  • Breast-feeding driver gets house arrest
  • Limbaugh accused of 'doctor shopping'
  • Obituaries of note

  • Health
  • A first: More women apply to medical school than men
  • Breast cancer test may predict risk of recurrence

  • Iraq
  • Americans unhurt in 2 rebel attacks
  • Raids aim to part rebels from their funds

  • Nation in brief
  • EPA issues new air standards

  • Science
  • In tiny sea creature, researchers find oldest male fossil

  • World in brief
  • Season's over, but new storm forms
  • Venezuela police deal out death, citizens say
  • Back to Top

    © 2006 • All Rights Reserved • St. Petersburg Times
    490 First Avenue South • St. Petersburg, FL 33701 • 727-893-8111