A tiny fossil preserved in red sandstone from Scotland has been identified as the oldest known insect.And they may well survive long after we disappear or kill ourselves off.
The fossil suggests insects were among the earliest animals to live on land and that winged flight may have emerged earlier than previously thought.
The fragmentary specimen from Rhynie in Aberdeenshire comes from deposits dated to between 396 and 407 million years old, during the Devonian Period. ...
The discovery suggests that insects almost certainly evolved in the Silurian Period, some 438-408 million years ago.
"In the late Silurian [438-408 million years ago] is where we have the first evidence for terrestrial ecosystems, so it really says that insects were represented in the earliest ecosystems on land," co-author Michael Engel of the University of Kansas, US, told BBC News Online. ...
The findings agree with a DNA study by Michael Gaunt and Michael Miles of the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine in London.
The study estimated that insects emerged about 434 million years ago, in the early Silurian.
Thursday, February 12, 2004
MST3Geek
Buzz, buzz.
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