Abundant and well-preserved organic-walled microfossils including acanthomorphic acritarchs have been found in Mesoproterozoic Beidajian Formation in the Yongji area of Shanxi Province, North China. The morphological ...Abundant and well-preserved organic-walled microfossils including acanthomorphic acritarchs have been found in Mesoproterozoic Beidajian Formation in the Yongji area of Shanxi Province, North China. The morphological and ultrastructural features of these acanthomorphic acri-tarchs resemble living dinoflagellates (e.g. double-walled and polygonal structures), which leads to the interpretation of these fossils as probably the oldest dinoflagellates. The detec-tion of dinosterane, a dinoflagellate biomarker, from pyro-lytic product of these fossils further supports the morpho-logical inference. This finding is consistent with molecular clock estimate that dinoflagellates may have diverged 700 to 900 million years (Ma) before previously known fossil re-cord.展开更多
基金supported by the National N atural Science Foundation of China(Grant No.40472003)the Ministry of Science and Technology of China(Grant Nos.G2000077701 and 2003CB7 16805)the Chinese Academy of Sciences(Grant No,KZCX3-SW-141).
文摘Abundant and well-preserved organic-walled microfossils including acanthomorphic acritarchs have been found in Mesoproterozoic Beidajian Formation in the Yongji area of Shanxi Province, North China. The morphological and ultrastructural features of these acanthomorphic acri-tarchs resemble living dinoflagellates (e.g. double-walled and polygonal structures), which leads to the interpretation of these fossils as probably the oldest dinoflagellates. The detec-tion of dinosterane, a dinoflagellate biomarker, from pyro-lytic product of these fossils further supports the morpho-logical inference. This finding is consistent with molecular clock estimate that dinoflagellates may have diverged 700 to 900 million years (Ma) before previously known fossil re-cord.