Doushantuo type preservation
In paleontology, Doushantuo preservation is a type of fossilization unique to the Doushantuo formation. It involves very early phosphatisation on a cellular level - with cells being replaced by phosphate before they degrade.[1]
Occurrence
The mode of preservation is typically found in shallow, high energy waters, as lenses of phosphate in carbonate rocks.[1] Its occurrence is assisted by high concentrations of phosphate, which are presumably led to precipitate around the degradation products of cells and cell walls.[1]
What is preserved
Cells are preserved at a cellular level, with arguments that sub-cellular structures may even represent cell nuclei.
Bias
Although the preservational window is open pretty continually from about 580 million years ago[verification needed] through most of the Cambrian, it tends to preserve microscopic things, such as embryos and bacteria.[1]
References
- ^ a b c d Butterfield, Nicholas J. (2003). "Exceptional Fossil Preservation and the Cambrian Explosion". Integrative and Comparative Biology. 43 (1): 166–177. doi:10.1093/icb/43.1.166. PMID 21680421.
- Doushantuo-type microfossils from latest Ediacaran phosphorites of northern Mongolia
- Doushantuo embryos preserved inside diapause egg cysts
- Three‐Dimensional Phosphatic Preservation Of Giant Acritarchs From The Terminal Proterozoic Doushantuo Formation In Guizhou And Hubei Provinces, South China
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- Orsten
- Doushantuo type
- Bitter Springs type
- Burgess Shale type
- Beecher's Trilobite Bed type
- Ediacaran type
![Legged trilobite](http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d7/Olenoides_serratus_oblique_with_antennas.jpg/97px-Olenoides_serratus_oblique_with_antennas.jpg)
- Small shelly fossils
- Acritarchs
- Trace fossils
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