Finn's Take· TL;DRA small patch of exposed rock along a Chinese roadside has yielded one of the most significant fossil discoveries in decades, fundamentally changing our understanding of when complex animal life first emerged on Earth. More than 700 fossils found in southwestern China's Yunnan province offer a window into life from 539 million years ago, during the waning end of the Ediacaran period , revealing that the evolutionary leap to complex animals happened millions of years earlier than researchers thought .
The discovery occurred by chance when colleagues at Yunnan University in China found the trove while looking for algal fossils in the region's cliff faces . What they uncovered was "some of the most significant early animal fossils" found in decades , preserved in exquisite detail at a site measuring just 518 square feet (50 square meters), covering roughly the same area as a dozen king-size mattresses .
These weren't the simple, flat creatures scientists expected from this ancient period. Instead, many of the fossils in this trove are remnants of more complex animals that lived three-dimensional lives, traveling up through the water and eating - behaviors previously thought to have emerged only at least 4 million years later in the Cambrian period .
Perhaps most remarkably, the fossils reveal the earliest known examples of bilateral symmetry - the fundamental body plan that defines nearly all modern animals, including humans. Some, including the abundant worm, were "bilaterians." This term refers to animals with bilateral symmetry, or a body plan where one side mirrors the other. This critical evolutionary adaptation helped early life to move through sediment or the water column, develop a nervous system and eventually "dominate" the animal kingdom. Most animals today are bilaterians—including humans .
Before this discovery, scientists saw traces of this symmetric body type in fossil tracks, but not the critters themselves . The Chinese fossils provide the first direct evidence of these crucial evolutionary innovations in action, showing creatures with similar features on left and right sides, as well as a head and an anus .
The site also preserved bizarre early relatives of modern animal groups. Among the finds are bizarre fossils of early Ambulacraria, ancestors of modern starfish and their close relatives, such as acorn worms. These ancient invertebrates had U-shaped body, were attached to the seafloor by stalks and had a pair of tentacles on their head, which they likely used to capture food .
The fossils reveal what researchers call a "transitional world" - both bizarre examples of life that existed in earlier periods and disappeared, along with early examples of organisms that would evolve into modern animals living side by side. This discovery helps resolve a long-standing puzzle in evolutionary biology known as the "rocks versus clocks" debate, where genetic analysis of how fast traits mutated and evolved suggested that humans and starfish had their earliest common ancestor in the Ediacaran period, but the fossils or rocks weren't there to show it happening .
Emily Mitchell, a paleontologist at the University of Cambridge who wasn't part of the research, said the new study "makes a huge amount of sense because the Ediacaran contains animals, we know there must have been a transitional stage between them and the Cambrian fauna. But until now we didn't really have any evidence of this" .
The discovery suggests that the famous Cambrian explosion - long considered the moment when complex animal life suddenly burst onto the scene - was actually less of a burst of evolution, and more of a final flourish . A gradual buildup of complex animal life was underway millions of years before the Cambrian period began.
This reframing has profound implications for understanding how life's complexity developed. "What fundamentally changed across this period is the way the animals on the planet interacted with each other," said Duncan Murdock, curator of Oxford's museum. "Once animals turned up and started eating each other and churning up the sediment, they changed the planet forever. And the planet that we live on is very much built on the foundations from the Ediacaran and Cambrian" .
The research team expects these fossils to fuel discoveries for years to come. "The fossils from this site are going to keep us busy for like 10 years, easily" , providing new insights into the deep evolutionary roots that connect all complex life on Earth today.