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The finding “gets rid of the more outlandish hypotheses about what these objects were,” says MIT geobiologist Roger Summons, who cowrote a related commentary in the same issue of Science . “You can’t argue with chemistry.”
Dickinsonia are part of the enigmatic Ediacara biota, the collective name for a burst of strange, alienlike life-forms that flourished during the Precambrian Eon. Ediacarans, originally named for Australia’s Ediacara Hills, where they were first discovered, are now found in Precambrian-aged rocks around the globe.
HARD-WON To collect Ediacaran fossils, lead scientist Ilya Bobrovskiy rappelled from the top of a cliff at this remote northeast Russian site, called Zimnii Gory, or “Winter Mountains,” on the coast of the White Sea. Ilya Bobrovskiy/Australian National Univ.
The new study was conducted on Ediacaran fossils extracted from a remote coastline in northwest Russia along the White Sea. The site is difficult to access — Bobrovskiy had to helicopter in and rappel down a cliff to collect the fossils — but the rewards are worth it, paleontologists say: The fossil-bearing rocks at the site haven’t been cooked and twisted by tectonic forces. The rocks are so pristine, in fact, that they still contain traces of soft tissue containing organic molecules, which researchers can use as biomarkers to help identify the fossils.
That’s particularly helpful when it comes to the Ediacaran fossils, which have proven difficult to place on the tree of life as they bear little resemblance to any known creatures . (SN: 5/18/13, p. 20 ). The Ediacarans were macrofossils, meaning that, at several centimeters across, they are large enough to see with the naked eye. But their strange shapes — for example, Dickinsonia resemble ribbed ovals that are symmetrical around a central axis — left scientists stumped. Most paleontologists suspected that Dickinsonia were animals. But some scientists argued they could be fungi, lichens or even giant, single-celled creatures called protists (SN: 1/26/13, p. 15 ).
Biomarkers in the soft tissue, however, provide a new line of evidence. To collect the organic molecules, the scientists removed thin films of organic matter from the rocks, and then extracted the molecules in the lab using solvents. The high-precision work must happen “under extremely clean conditions to avoid contaminants,” says coauthor Jochen Brocks, also of Australia National University.
As a control, the team also extracted organic material from the rocks surrounding the Dickinsonia fossils. Steroids isolated from the surrounding rocks were revealed to be 70 percent stigmasteroid, an organic molecule found in algae. That’s consistent with the likely marine setting for the Ediacara biota: The creatures were thought to dwell in shallow waters, atop microbial mats.
But the fossils themselves were strikingly high in cholesterol relative to other steroids, making up between about 85 percent and 93 percent of all steroids in different fossils of the genus. “The nearly 100 percent proportion of cholesterol in the Dickinsonia fossils tells us it must have been an animal,” Brocks says. Cholesterol is produced by bacteria in the guts of animals.
Next up, the team plans to look for biomarkers from other Ediacarans in the White Sea rocks — and there are plenty of intriguing options, Brocks says. “The coolest target is the rangeomorphs. These weird creatures are constructed like a fractal. No modern animal is built like that.”