500-million year old jellyfish fossil discovered Burgess Shale after century-long search


  • Fossils of any type of jellyfish are extremely rare, according to the study.
  • The new study helps underscore the Cambrian period as a critical time for jellyfish evolution. Jellyfish and their relatives are thought to be one of the earliest animal groups to have evolved.
  • According to Royal Ontario Museum, Jellyfish belong to medusozoans, or animals producing medusae, and include today’s box jellies, hydroids, stalked jellyfish and true jellyfish.
  • Medusozoans are part of one of the oldest groups of animals to have existed, a group which also includes corals and sea anemones.

A 508-million-year-old fossil discovered in the mountains of British Columbia has been dubbed the oldest adult swimming jellyfish ever found by paleontologists looking to understand soft-bodied animals’ relationship to the ancient past.

A new paper published this week in Proceedings of the Royal Society B details Burgessomedusa phasmiformis, a newly named animal and the first jellyfish species discovered in Canada’s Burgess Shale, located in Yoho National Park. Paleontologists found 182 fossils of Burgessomedusa between the late 1980s and 1990s only in a spot called Raymond Quarry.

Considered by UNESCO to be one of the most important in the world, Burgess Shale preserves fossils that offer a glimpse of early life on Earth during the Cambrian, a period when animal diversity exploded more than half a billion years ago, according to the National Museum of Natural History. 

Artistic reconstruction of a group of Burgessomedusa phasmiformis swimming in the Cambrian sea.

Burgess Shale fossils were first found in 1909 by Charles D. Walcott, then Secretary of the Smithsonian Institution, but Burgessomedusa have eluded detection for reasons that are still unclear, according to Smithsonian Magazine’s Riley Black. 

Royal Ontario Museum paleontologist and study author Joseph Moysiuk said paleontologists who first saw the ancient jellyfish fossils decades ago knew almost immediately that it was an early jellyfish, but it took years before a formal description of the fossils was undertaken, according to Smithsonian Magazine.

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