Attacking an enigma with engineering.One of the biggest headaches in paleontology paleontology (pā'lēəntŏl`əjē) [Gr.,= study of early beings], science of the life of past geologic periods based on fossil remains. is the so-called Ediacaran fauna--a group of squishy squish·y adj. squish·i·er, squish·i·est 1. Soft and wet; spongy. 2. Sloppily sentimental. Adj. 1. , bathmat-shape beings that filled the oceans half a billion years ago. Some of these sheetlike creatures are recognized as the first known animals. Others have resisted categorization, leading some researchers to suggest that these organisms weren't animals at all but belonged to some extinct kingdom. Two paleontologists have delved into this debate with a simple engineering test designed to explore what these life-forms were made of. Kenneth M. Schopf of Harvard University Harvard University, mainly at Cambridge, Mass., including Harvard College, the oldest American college. Harvard College Harvard College, originally for men, was founded in 1636 with a grant from the General Court of the Massachusetts Bay Colony. and Tomasz K. Baumiller of the University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries. in Ann Arbor studied a fossil of the organism called Dickinsonia, which had a rippled oval body. Some paleontologists have classified Dickinsonia as the earliest known worm, while others have envisioned it a member of a separate kingdom--giant unicells filled with multiple nuclei and protoplasm protoplasm, term once used for the fundamental material of which all living things were thought to be composed. It was studied by a number of early scientists, especially by Félix Dujardin, J. E. Purkinje, M. J. S. . Schopf and Baumiller fashioned two types of Dickinsonia models, one using latex molds and the other employing plastic bags filled with solutions of Karo KARO Kane Amateur Radio Operators (Kane, PA) syrup. They varied the densities of the models from a value equal to that of water to a much meatier substance. Then they observed how each model fared when placed in a tank with a moving current of water. Models with densities resembling those of worms and of protoplasm were so light that they got pushed by the current, the scientists report in the summer issue of Lethaia. The results suggest either that Dickinsonia, which lived on the seafloor, was denser than paleontologists previously suspected or that the organism was held down by the mats of microbes that covered the ocean bottom at the time. |
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