- History of invertebrate paleozoology
The history of invertebrate paleozoology (also spelled "palaeozoology") differs from the
history of paleontology in that the former usually emphasizespaleobiology and thepaleoecology ofextinct marine invertebrates , while the latter typically emphasizes theearth science s and thesedimentary rock remains of terrestrialvertebrate s.The
historical development of sub-vertebrate or non-vertebratepaleozoology may also be described as the history of invertebrate paleobiology or as the history of invertebrate paleontology. Nearlysynonym ous are the history of marine paleozoology, history of marine paleobiology, and history of marine paleontology -- although the latter three may coverprehistoric fish es,shark s and simpler sea-dwelling organisms.By far and away, invertebrate paleozoology is the easiest type of
fossil collecting . "Unlike" the difficult-to-analyze and hard-to-interpretfossil s ofpaleobotany (plants) andmicropaleontology (microbes), and "unlike" the rarely-found and poorly-preservedskeleton s ofvertebrate paleontology , invertebrate fossils are usually both common and simple to identify. This is because manyprehistoric invertebrates were hard-shelledmollusk s,brachiopod s,trilobite s,bryozoan s,crinoid s orcoral s who were buried amid marine,sediment -preserving conditions; and therefore frequentlyfossilized for future collectors,museum s,rockhound s,scientist s and fossil hunters.Origins of invertebrate paleozoology
Stone-age people were without doubt the very first fossil collectors.Fossilized echinoderm s have been found inDunstable ,Bedfordshire , centralEngland , decorating a long-buriedhuman skeleton ; the prehistoric gravesite wasNeolithic .In widely-separated, ancient societies around the globe, there once were many
legend s andtale s of great floods,sea serpent s,dragon s,sea monster s, and invertebratecryptozoa associated with so-called "formed stone s" or "figured stone s" ofsea shell s, fishes, corals, sea lilies, tracks,burrow s, andtrail s. But, ascivilization s progressed, these odd rocks began to be recognized as the fossilized remains and traces of prehistoric animals.Scholars in
ancient Greece produced some of the first scientific insights. PrecedingCharles Darwin by two thousand years,Anaximander of Miletus (611 to 547 B.C.E.) proposed a non-creationist ,evolutionary theory of life. AfterXenophanes of Colophon (576 to 480 B.C.E.) scrutinized fossils of mollusks and other sea-dwellingcreature s entombed inrock strata , Xenophanes pronounced that these fossils were evidence of once-livinganimal s. Similarly, after examining fossil sea shells around 440 B.C.E.,Epedocles ofAkragas hypothesized that natural selection was occurring over vast, incomprehensible expanses of time.By the middle of the
fourth century B.C.E.,Aristotle was composing "On the Origins of Animals ". Both he and his follower/successorTheophrastus speculated that "plastic forces " within theearth had turned animals into fossils of stone.Invertebrate paleontology languished for the next two thousand years in medieval Europe, but continued in the medieval Islamic world, with Islamic earth scientists and scholars such asAvicenna (979 to 1039 C.E.). This Arabic-writingPersian continued thehypothesis that earthen "plastic forces" enabledfossilization . In "The Book of Healing " (1027), Avicenna contributed topaleontology with his explanation of how the stoniness offossil s was caused.Aristotle previously explained it in terms ofvapor ousexhalation s, which Avicenna modified into the theory of petrifyingfluid s ("succus lapidificatus"), which was elaborated on byAlbert of Saxony in the 14th century and accepted in some form by mostnaturalist s by the 16th century. [citation|title=The Meaning of Fossils: Episodes in the History of Palaeontology|first=M. J. S.|last=Rudwick|year=1985|publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=0226731030|page=24] Ibn Sina gave the following explanation for the origin of fossils from thepetrifaction of plants and animals:The
invention of theprinting press and theEuropean Renaissance ofscientific inquiry (a.k.a. theAge of Reason ) changed things. Significantly,Georgius Agricola -- a founder ofmineralology -- discussed and illustrated invertebrate fossils in his "De Natura Fossilium " (1546 / 1558).Although remembered mostly for his development of
binomial nomenclature andbiotic systematics in his "Systema Naturae " (1735),Carolus Linnaeus also described many prehistoric marine invertebrates which he had observed withinSilurian strata in his nativeSweden . And whileJean-Étienne Guettard (1715 to 1786) discussed the marinepaleoecology of ancient mollusks, more and more fossils were being reported fromthe Americas andAustralasia .Georges L. L. Buffon subsequently described seven
geologic "Epochs of Nature " (1778) wherein he boldly argued thatfossiliferous sedimentary strata proved that theworld was at least 70,000 years old. In 1795 the very first geochronologic period -- theJurassic -- was named.Recent evolution of invertebrate paleozoology
Soon thereafter, Buffon's colleague
Chevalier de Lamarck -- a founder of invertebratesystematics andinvertebrate paleontology -- published still-more shell fossils in his "Systematics of Animals Without Backbones ", (1801) and his "Natural History of Animals Without Backbones " (1815 to 1822), so as to illustrateglobal change s inpaleogeography . Lamarck also argued that the more adaptable prehistoric invertebrates were the animals that survivedenvironmental change -- a prelude to theconcept of "survival of the fittest ".Next, William "Strata" Smith employed invertebrate
index fossil s to map Britishoutcrop s in his "Geological Map of England and Wales with Part of Scotland " (1815), and in his book the very next year, "Strata Identified by Organized Fossils " (1816). [ For Smith's founding of English geology, readSimon Winchester (2001), "The Map that Changed the World " (London, England:Harper Collins and theGeological Society of London ). ]Sir Roderick Impey Murchison andCharles Lapworth quarried middlePaleozoic era index fossil s, such as the extinct trilobites, extinctgraptolite s, and mostly-extinctbrachiopod s. Their efforts led to the latter's ground-breakingtreatise , "The Silurian System " (1839), and to the naming of theOrdovician ,Silurian ,Devonian andPermian geologic period s. Eclipsing Maurchison's inventory of Silurian fossils, however, wasAdam Sedgwick 's 1835 discovery of even-olderCambrian period fossils. Three years later, Sedgwick proposed that itsstratigraphic era be named thePaleozoic .Meanwhile, yet another Briton,
Sir Charles Lyell , penned his "Principles of Geology " (1830) and "Elements of Geology " (1838) in which he divided the Tertiary into the epochs ofEocene ,Miocene ,Oligocene andPliocene . By 1834 to 1838,naturalist s fromFrance toRussia were using the term "paleontology ", and adding yet other names to its prehistoric eons, eras, periods, epochs, andage s.The provocative "
Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation " (1844 to 1853) by then-anonymousRobert Chambers ,Alfred Russel Wallace 's joint essay (1858) withCharles Darwin , and Darwin's "Origin of Species " (1859 to 1872) popularized the evolutionary theories ofnatural selection . Indeed, in the veryfirst edition of his "Origin of Species" (1859), Darwin even speculated that the earth might be half a billion years old. Scientific critics, however, pressured him to withdraw this notion from all subsequent editions. In this book Darwin also expressed frustration at the seemingly-total absence ofPre-Cambrian creatures prior to theCambrian explosion of the invertebrates, since many critics saw this absence asproof ofcreationism .Around the same time,
James Hall produced his comprehensive, many volumes of "Paleontology of New York " State (1847 to 1894), based on his years of collecting trilobites, graptolites, brachiopods,crinoid s,echinoid s, mollusks and other ancient marine invertebrates.Inspired by Darwin's
manifesto ,Thomas H. Huxley emphatically citedembryologic and fossil evidence for theevolution of "higher" invertebrates from "lower"cnidarian s,worm s andmollusk s, thereby elaborating what he concluded was "Man's Place in Nature " (1863). AnotherDarwinist ,Ernst Haeckel , proposed aProtozoa -Metazoa theory of animal origins, while arguing thatembryonic "ontogeny recapitulatesphylogeny " throughout organicprehistory . Haeckel popularized his paleozoologic ideas with majesticgenealogical tree s of theAnimal Kingdom in his "General Morphology of Organisms " (1866).A half-century later, the
genetic conclusions ofGregor Mendel (1822 to 1884) were revived by "The Mutation Theory " propounded byHugo de Vries , thereby fortifying Darwin's 19th-centurytheory of evolution . [ For more about de Vries andMendelism , seeTheodosius Dobzhansky (1951), "Genetics and the Origin of Species ". ISBN 0-231-05475-0. ]Around the same time, paleozoologist
Charles Doolittle Walcott provedtrilobite s to bearthropod s -- and not at all likemollusk s. Then, in 1910, he discovered the "best-preserved"Cambrian fossils ever found: theBurgess shale fauna . Over the next seven years, Walcott excavated 80,000 fossils from thefossiliferous site. [ For some provocative illustrations of Walcott's fossils, and an interestingcritique of his discovery, readStephen Jay Gould (1989), "" (New York:W. W. Norton ). ]Meanwhile, in "
The Origin of Continents and Oceans " (1915 / 1929),Alfred Wegener outlined his hereticaltheory ofcontinental drift . Although he cited invertebrate fossils andcontinent algeography in support of his idea, another half-century would pass before Wegener's theory would be vindicated by findings ingeophysics andplate tectonics .By that time, 20th-century sciences -- such as
biometrics ,organic chemistry ,electron microscopy andmolecular phylogenetics -- were aiding invertebrate paleobiologists as they searched for evidence even in the rugged, barren lands ofSaharan Africa ,Sinkiang ,Greater Mongolia , andAntarctica .Finally, in 1947,
paleontologist Reg Sprigg discovered theEdiacaran fauna -- the "best-preserved" fossil invertebrates of the billion-year-longProterozoic eon. Darwin's 1859 embarrassment at the absence ofPre-Cambrian fossils was now put at rest.Footnotes
Further reading
For books on identifying fossilized invertebrates, and for books about the current study of them, go to
Invertebrate paleontology .For books about paleontology and biology together, go to
Paleobiology .{More books to come here}
ee also
{|align-left
*
Biologist s
*Collecting -- very general
*Earth scientist s
*Evolutionary biology
*Evolutionary history of life (rather thanPrehistoric life
*Evolutionist s
*Fossil collecting
*Fossil park s -- protected sites world-wide
*Geologist s
*History of biology
*History of evolutionary thought
*History of geology
*History of paleontology espec. land-dwelling vertebrates
*History of zoology (before Darwin) , that is, pre-1859
*History of zoology (after Darwin) , that is, post-1859*
Invertebrate paleontology emphasizes marine invertebrates
*List of notable fossils and their discovery
*List of fossil sites world-wide
*Museum s
*Natural history
*Naturalist s
*Paleobiology
*Paleontologist s -- includes paleobiologists & paleozoologists
*Paleozoology
*Prehistoric animal s
*Rockhound s
*Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology -- around 50 volumes of detailed information regarding fossils of invertebrates
*Zoologist sExternal links
{Some from
Invertebrate paleontology , perhaps}
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