Jann Vendetti, a paleontologist at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County who was not involved in the new study, tells Greshko that the amber holds an “extraordinary assemblage, a true and beautiful snapshot of a beach in the Cretaceous. Much like the headline-making insect found entombed in opal earlier this year, the ammonite amber offers a visually appealing, contemplative glimpse into the distant past. Previously, scientists have identified such scenes as a spider attacking a wasp, an ant beleaguered by a parasitic mite and a millipede seemingly suspended in mid-air. The Puzosia ammonite now joins an impressive collection of animals forever frozen in amber’s honeyed hues. The juvenile ammonite in question belonged to the subgenus Puzosia, which emerged around 100 million years ago and died out around 93 million years ago. According to Science ’s Sokol, researchers used x-ray computerized tomography scans to take a closer look at the shell, which they confirmed as ammonite on the basis of its intricate internal chambers.Īmmonites, a group of shelled mollusks that ranged in size from a fraction of an inch to more than eight feet across, lived between 66 million and 400 million years ago, making them dinosaurs’ near-contemporaries. The specimen is the only known example of an ammonite preserved in amberĪs National Geographic ’s Greshko writes, the amber sample came to scientists’ attention after Shanghai-based collector Fangyuan Xia purchased it for $750 from a dealer who had erroneously identified the ammonite as a land snail.
![ammonite sea creature ammonite sea creature](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/6c/ac/b4/6cacb485421515cba7c507261e452cb1.jpg)
An unlikely but plausible final scenario involves tsunami-strength waves flooding a forest and depositing the ammonite into pools of resin. Alternatively, it’s possible storm winds carried the ammonite shell and other animal remains into the forest. First, David Bressan explains for Forbes, the researchers posit that resin dripped down from a beachside tree, coating the remains of land and sea creatures previously stranded on the shore. The study’s authors outline three main theories regarding the fossil’s formation.
![ammonite sea creature ammonite sea creature](https://i.pinimg.com/736x/b2/3c/9e/b23c9ee944289a31ae31493c0825888f--prehistoric-reptiles.jpg)
Based on the lack of soft tissue present in the amber, scientists believe the organisms trapped within died long before encountering sticky tree resin in what is now northern Myanmar. The ammonite specimen is so singular, Greshko writes, that it as “eyebrow-raising as finding dinosaur remains on the bottom of an ancient seafloor.”Īccording to the Independent’s Phoebe Weston, all that remains of the mollusk is its shell, which is preserved alongside at least 40 other creatures, including spiders, millipedes, cockroaches, beetles, flies and wasps. Given the fact that amber forms on land, it “commonly traps only some terrestrial insects, plants, or animals,” study co-author Bo Wang, a paleontologist at the Nanjing Institute of Geology and Paleontology, tells National Geographic’s Michael Greshko.
![ammonite sea creature ammonite sea creature](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/16/3c/91/163c91bd6506b5eb126d68e36b8f6f44.jpg)
The critter is also one of the only marine organisms found in amber to date.
![ammonite sea creature ammonite sea creature](https://i.pinimg.com/originals/e2/f2/a1/e2f2a183ff70b3fa5a0954acf8dd4fbf.jpg)
Among others, the motley crew included four sea snails, four intertidal isopods, 22 mites, 12 insects, a millipede, and, most impressively, a juvenile ammonite, or extinct marine mollusk distantly related to modern squid and octopuses.Īs Joshua Sokol reports for Science magazine, the three-centimeter chunk of fossilized tree resin-newly described in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences-holds the first known example of an amber-entombed ammonite. Around 100 million years ago, the remains of a misfit group of marine and land creatures were entrapped in viscous tree resin that eventually hardened into Burmese amber.