New sites of Chengjiang fossils: crucial windows on the Cambrian explosion

  • XINGLIANG ZHANG
    Early Life Institute & Department of Geology, Northwest University, 710069, Xian, China (e-mail: )
  • DEGAN SHU
    Early Life Institute & Department of Geology, Northwest University, 710069, Xian, China (e-mail: )
  • YONG LI
    Early Life Institute & Department of Geology, Northwest University, 710069, Xian, China (e-mail: )
  • JIAN HAN
    Early Life Institute & Department of Geology, Northwest University, 710069, Xian, China (e-mail: )

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<jats:p> Soft-bodied and lightly sclerotized Chengjiang fossils have been found at more than ten new localities in the Lower Cambrian Qiongzhusi and Canglangpu formations of east central Yunnan. At the same time, three different fossil assemblages have been recognized, i.e. <jats:italic>Kunmingella–Isoxys–Naraoia</jats:italic> assemblage at Chengjiang, <jats:italic>Kunmingella</jats:italic> – <jats:italic>Cricocosmia</jats:italic> assemblage at Haikou, and <jats:italic>Kunmingella</jats:italic> – <jats:italic>Wutingaspis</jats:italic> – <jats:italic>Obolus</jats:italic> assemblage at Anning and Wuding. These sites yield new and striking specimens, such as a new tentacular animal, brachiopods with pedicles preserved, and the enigmatic <jats:italic>Xidazoon</jats:italic> (having mixed phyla characters), which are significant in our understanding of animal phylogeny. Above all, the appearance of diverse chordates and agnathans (vertebrates) greatly expands our knowledge of the Cambrian explosion. The discovery of soft-bodied fossils at many new localities and the very wide distribution of the Qiongzhusi Formation suggest that many more localities remain to be discovered. Here, a new early form of tentaculate, <jats:italic>Cambrotentacus sanwuia</jats:italic> gen. et sp. nov. (perhaps related to lophophorates and entoprocts), is described. </jats:p>

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