Ventogyrus Type post Author Günter Bechly Date March 25, 2021 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , Adolf Seilacher, Australia, cnidarians, ctenophorans, Ediacaran organisms, Ediacaran Period, Mark McMenamin, morphology, Precambrian House of Cards Series, publish or perish, Rugoconites enigmaticus, South Australia, spicules, symmetry, Trilobozoa, trilobozoans Examining Potential Other Trilobozoans Günter Bechly March 25, 2021 Evolution 4 Last but not least, there is this gem: In 1986 strange mushroom-shaped deep-sea animals were collected offshore South Australia. Read More ›
A_Guantanamo_sponge_-a Type post Author Günter Bechly Date May 12, 2020 CategoriesEvolution Tagged , animals, body plans, Cambrian Explosion, Carl Zimmer, China, Darwin's Doubt, Darwinian evolution, Darwinian theory, Donald Prothero, Ediacaran biota, embryos, fossil record, Jerry Coyne, Metazoa, metazoans, microfossils, Namapoikia rietoogensis, Namibia, Neoproterozoic, New York Times, Newfoundland, Nick Matzke, Norway, paleontology, precambrian fossils, protists, Rugoconites enigmaticus, Russia, snowball Earth, South Australia, spicules, sponges, Stephen Meyer, Trilobozoa, Triradialomorpha, White Sea, Wikipedia The Myth of Precambrian Sponges Günter Bechly May 12, 2020 Evolution 54 Evolutionists would expect to find sponges as the earliest animals in the fossil record. Read More ›