. Space Industry and Business News .




.
EARLY EARTH
New fossils demonstrate that powerful eyes evolved in a twinkling
by Staff Writers
Adelaide, Australia (SPX) Jul 01, 2011

The compound eyes of a living insect - a predatory robber fly - showing the individual lenses. Credit: Photo by Peter Hudson (South Australian Museum).

Palaeontologists have uncovered half-a-billion-year-old fossils demonstrating that primitive animals had excellent vision.

An international team led by scientists from the South Australian Museum and the University of Adelaide found the exquisite fossils, which look like squashed eyes from a recently swatted fly.

This discovery will be published tomorrow (Thursday 30 June 2011) in the prestigious journal Nature.

The lead author is Associate Professor Michael Lee from the South Australian Museum and the University of Adelaide's School of Earth and Environmental Sciences.

Compound Eyes
Modern insects and crustaceans have "compound eyes" consisting of hundreds or even thousands of separate lenses. They see their world as pixels - each lens produces a pixel of vision. More lenses mean more pixels and better visual resolution. (Each lens does not form a miniature image - a myth often perpetuated by Hollywood.)

Evolutionary Advantage
The fossil compound eyes were found on Kangaroo Island, South Australia and are 515 million years old. They have over 3000 lenses, making them more powerful than anything from that era, and probably belonged to an active predator that was capable of seeing in dim light.

Their discovery reveals that some of the earliest animals possessed very powerful vision; similar eyes are found in many living insects, such as robber flies. Sharp vision must therefore have evolved very rapidly, soon after the first predators appeared during the 'Cambrian Explosion' of life that began around 540 million years ago.

Given the tremendous adaptive advantage conferred by sharp vision for avoiding predators and locating food and shelter, there must have been tremendous evolutionary pressure to elaborate and refine visual organs.

Who owned them?
As the fossil eyes were found isolated, it's not certain what animal they came from, but they probably belonged to a large shrimp-like creature. The rocks containing the eyes also preserve a dazzling array of ancient marine creatures, many new to science. They include primitive trilobite-like creatures, armored worms, and large swimming predators with jointed feeding appendages.

More pixels: more chance of survival
The recently discovered fossil eyes would have seen the world with over 3000 pixels, giving its owner a huge visual advantage over its contemporaries, which would have seen a very blurry world with about 100 pixels. This is much better than the living horseshoe crab, which sees the world as 1000 pixels, but not as good as living dragonflies, which have the best compound eyes and see the world as ~28 000 pixels.

Authors: Dr Michael Lee (South Australian Museum and University of Adelaide - School of Earth and Environmental Sciences), with Dr John Paterson (University of New England), Dr Jim Jago (South Australian Museum and UniSA), Dr Diego Garcia-Bellido (Instituto de Geologia Economica, Madrid), Dr Greg Edgecombe (Natural History Museum, London), and Dr Jim Gehling (South Australian Museum).




Related Links
University of Adelaide
Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com

.
Get Our Free Newsletters Via Email
...
Buy Advertising Editorial Enquiries






. Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle



EARLY EARTH
Scientists Measure Body Temperature of Dinosaurs for the First Time
Washington DC (SPX) Jun 30, 2011
Were dinosaurs slow and lumbering, or quick and agile? It depends largely on whether they were cold- or warm-blooded. When dinosaurs were first discovered in the mid-19th century, paleontologists thought they were plodding beasts that relied on their environment to keep warm, like modern-day reptiles. But research during the last few decades suggests that they were faster creatures, ... read more


EARLY EARTH
Apple-Microsoft group pays $4.5 bn for Nortel patents

FarmVille's Zynga files for $1 billion IPO

Ocean floor muddies China's grip on '21st-century gold'

Japan's Ricoh to buy Pentax digital camera brand

EARLY EARTH
US Army Builds and Tests Future Network During NIE Exercise

Celebrating the 40th Anniversary of the Guardrail System

Russia launches Cosmos-series military satellite

Spain aims at military-civilian satellites

EARLY EARTH
Minotaur Rocket Launch from NASA Wallops Re-Scheduled

Parallel Ariane 5 launch campaigns keep up Arianespace's 2011 mission pace

Ariane 5 payload integration underway; First Soyuz launchers arrive

Arianespace to launch Astra 5B satellite

EARLY EARTH
Astrium awarded Galileo Full Operational Capability Ground Control Segment Contract

House Committee Acts to Halt LightSquared Proposal Until GPS Interference Issues Resolved

US Supreme Court to hear warrantless GPS case

Study Shows Interference with GPS Poses Major Threat to U.S. Economy

EARLY EARTH
JAL plans budget carrier with Jetsar: report

Swiss solar plane returns after European flights

China to buy 88 A320 planes: Airbus

EU stands firm as polluting tax row threatens Airbus sales

EARLY EARTH
Change in material boosts prospects of ultrafast single-photon detector

Scientists Hope to Get Glimpse of Adolescent Universe from Revolutionary Instrument-on-a-Chip

The future of chip manufacturing

Silver pen has the write stuff for flexible electronics

EARLY EARTH
La Nina's Exit Leaves Climate Forecasts in Limbo

NASA satellite gets 2 tropical cyclones in 1 shot

Paving the Way for Space-Based Air Pollution Sensors

Nigeria prepares to launch two earth observation satellites

EARLY EARTH
Greenpeace's Rainbow Warrior III takes shape

Brussels threatens fines over Naples waste

Waste piles cleared from central Naples

Residents set fire to garbage in Naples protests


Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily Express :: SpaceWar Express :: TerraDaily Express :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News
.

The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2011 - Space Media Network. AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement