Wouldn't it be cool to be able to point at a fossil and know that it's the first, say, plant,
or four-legged creature, or insect?
But identifying the first anything in the fossil record is hard for a few reasons.
First, the fossil record is patchy, because things only fossilize by chance, and we haven't found all the fossils
there are to find; we could find a new oldest mammal or oldest insect tomorrow.
Second, scientists like to group animals by their evolutionary relationships to each other.
It's especially important for these groups to have a single ancestor.
So, for example, the group "mammals" includes me, platypuses, and the ancestor we have in common,
plus everything in between.
When we find an ancient creature, it's hard to know for absolute certain if we've found that mysterious ancestor,
or just an offshoot of the ancestor's lineage, a cousin.
So what we think is the first reptile could be an animal that was related to reptiles, but wasn't actually their
ancestor at all.
Finally, there's no person in charge of declaring one fossil or another to be the official first thing of its kind.
That's left for scientists to debate, and they don't always agree, because it's hard to tell.
Evolution is a gradual process, and there's no easy way to distinguish the last thing that is not a bird from the
first thing that is a bird.
But, with all that said, here are some of the first fossils of their kind that we know of.
Number one: first evidence of life.
The oldest fossils are really, really old; to find them, you have to find the oldest rocks in the world.
The oldest rocks in the world are in Australia, and the oldest fossils are 3.5 billion year-old bacterial colonies
known as stromatolites.
A stromatolite is a structure similar to the ones made by some of today's Australian bacteria.
It looks like an unassuming lump of rock.
But because the bacteria grow layer by layer and trap the minerals as they do, stromatolites have a
characteristic spiked pattern.
These are the oldest fossils we've ever found, but there are traces of what could be life that go back even earlier.
Rocks don't last forever; they're always being melted down, or smashed, or some combination of the two.
But tiny crystals, called zircons, are much tougher than regular rock, and can get incorporated into new rocks
when old ones are destroyed.
Scientists have identified zircons from 4.1 billion years ago that contain traces of carbon, and the chemistry of
this carbon is consistent with biological activity.
Which is weird, because for a long time, scientists thought that life couldn't have existed more than
3.8 billion years ago, because there were too many asteroids crashing into Earth all the time.
So, if researchers confirm that these 4.1 billion year-old zircons contain traces of life, we might have to revise
our view of early Earth.
Number two: first vertebrate
I'd really like to show you the first vertebrate known to science – you know, an animal with a backbone – but
scientists actually have no idea what the first vertebrate was.
When it comes to early vertebrates, the fossil record is especially spotty.
The earliest vertebrates didn't have mineralized bones, so there were no hard parts to fossilize.
What few soft tissue fossils we have tend to look like squashed blobs, and blobs are difficult to interpret, even
for paleontologists with 3D modelling systems.
We do have a few milestone blobs: Pikaia was long thought to be the ancestor of all vertebrates, but its
status isn't universally accepted.
Haikouichthys, Myllokunmingia, and Metaspriggina, all from 520 million years ago, seem to be either early
vertebrates or something very close.
Based on these fossils, we can guess what the first vertebrate would've looked like: it would've had eyes
that faced forward and up and along the fin, along the midline of its body,
it had no jaw, it was a mere few centimetres long.
Pretty humble start for the diverse vertebrates we know today.
Number three: first crustacean.
Crustaceans are animals made up of three segments with a hard exoskeleton and eyes on stocks.
These crustaceans include crabs, lobsters, and shrimp.
But the earliest crustacean fossils come from a famous deposit called the Burgess Shale, which represents the
huge boom of animal diversity from way back in the Cambrian period more than 505 million years ago,
known as the Cambrian explosion.
From it, we know that many types of animals that are still around, like crustaceans and the early ancestors
of vertebrates had already evolved by half a billion years ago!
That's a long time for a group of animals to last.
Of the crustaceans in the Burgess Shale, the best known is Canadaspis;
we have literally thousands of specimens.
This is unusually good luck as fossils go, because more fossils mean that all the interesting features are more
likely to be preserved.
So, scientists are quite sure this one's a crustacean based on the structure of its head; it had eyes on stalks
and a hard shell just like modern crustaceans.
Number four: first land plant.
The earliest known plants on land came after the earliest crustaceans, and had no stems or roots.
They looked like modern liverworts, and they lived 472 million years ago.
Plants didn't always fossilize well, but the spores of these early plants were nearly indestructible.
Scientists in Argentina found fossilized spores in local sediment, and when they dissolved the sediment to
recover them, they found that the spores represented multiple genera, or groups of species.
That means these liverworts had already had some time to evolve and diversify; they probably first appeared on
land 10 or 20 million years before these spores were made, maybe even earlier.
472 million years is a surprisingly long time ago.
The next oldest plant spores ever found are similar, but they're 10 million years younger and found far from
Argentina, in the Czech Republic and Saudi Arabia.
Number five: first jawed fish.
Jaws were a major evolutionary innovation, but both heads and backbones came first.
The earliest fish with jaws were called Placoderms, and they ruled the seas between 430 and 360 million years ago.
They had huge, bony plates around the outsides of their heads, making them look like armoured submarines
from the front.
But the armour only extended part of the way down their bodies, and their tails were bare or
only lightly covered with scales.
Most Placoderms had simple jaws, but there's one that looked a little more advanced.
Entelognathus, which lived 419 million years ago, evolved a jaw structure that looks like the complex
arrangement found in bony fish and all their descendants.
Biologists aren't sure whether this means that Entelognathus is the ancestor of all bony fish, or if they
evolved the pattern independantly from bony fish, but it does seem to be the first fish with a modern face.
Number six: first insect.
The oldest fossil of a creature we can be sure is an insect comes from Scotland.
It's called Rhyniognatha.
Rhyniognatha lived between 407 and 396 million years ago, and it can be identified as a true insect
based on the shape of its jaws.
In fact, its jaws specifically resemble those of a winged insect, so it's possible that flight had already evolved by
400 million years ago.
But since the only Rhyniognatha fossil we have is partial and doesn't include wings, we can't be sure if it could fly.
But this does mean insects probably evolved well before Rhyniognatha.
We know that plants had already begun to colonize the land by the Silurian period, about 438 million years ago,
and it's likely that insects were a part of these earliest land-based ecosystems.
Number seven: First tetrapod. Everything that walks on
four legs or later learned to walk onto
has a common ancestor. This group of animals is called tetrapods or
four-footed creatures. Many early
tetrapods look like something that's
halfway between an amphibian and a fish
which isn't too surprising because
that's pretty much what they are. Two of the earliest tetrapods are closely
related specimens that go back 375
million years:
Elginerpeton and Obuchivictis.
Obuchivictis was initially thought to be a fish. But
analyzing its head together with Elginerpeton showed them both to be early
tetrapod. But there's evidence that
tetrapods maybe 20 million years older
than these two. A set of fossilized
footprints in Poland is 395 million
years old and they were made by a
four-footed creature. We don't know much
about this animal but it may have been
surprisingly big and stocky at 2.5
meters in length which probably means
it's been walking for a while and the later
fishy forms of four footed life weren't
the first to come out of the ocean
Number eight: First reptile. The first reptile was also the first amniote, a group of
creatures that evolved eggs that didn't
need to be kept in water. This allowed
animals to finally cut the tie binding
them to the water and live on land
completely. Reptiles, birds and mammals are all amniotes. The earliest reptile ever
found is called Hylonomus. It lived 315 million years ago in what is now North
America. It was small,
only about 20 centimeters in length and looked more or less like a modern lizard
It probably ate insects because
plant-eating tetrapods didn't exist yet.
Amniotes have probably been around since about 35 million years before Hylonomus
what is the earliest one we can be
fairly confident about. Number nine: First
mammal. The earliest placental mammal
ever found was a tiny shrew like
creature called Juramaia. It lived
alongside the dinosaurs in the Jurassic
period,
a hundred sixty million years ago. Its
name means Jurassic mother.
Juramaia is eutherian mammal, meaning it's more closely related to modern
mammals with fully functional placentas
than other mammals such as monotremes
like the platypus or marsupials like the
Koala. Eutherians give birth to live
young which mature inside the mother's body and get the nutrition from the
placenta. Marsupials give birth much
earlier and keep their young in pouches
and monotremes lay aggs. Despite its name,
Juramaia is probably not our direct
ancestor but a close relative. Still, the
discovery of Juramaia did turn
conventional wisdom about mammal
evolution on its head. Before Juramaia, the earliest known placental mammal was
only 125 million years old but Juramaia came along 35 million years earlier than
that. That means the split between
eutherian mammals and marsupials
probably happened about a 165
million years ago
That's much earlier than we thought and
shows mammals were already evolving and
diversifying in the age of the dinosaurs. Number ten: First bird. You might already
know this one:
it's Archaeopteryx. Well, it's probably,
Archaeopteryx. We've known about this
145 million year old
animal since Darwin's time and it became a poster child for evolution. Its fossils
had clear impressions of wing feathers
like the ones Birds used to fly but it
also had teeth and a bony tail
It looked like the perfect transitional
form between dinosaurs and birds. But
there is another animal that has a
pretty strong claim. It's called Aurornis
and has many of the same transitional
features Archaeopteryx does. It also has
wings and a tail like Archaeopteryx.
Except, Aurornis was first, by 10 million
years. The more dinosaurs with feathers we discover, and there are a lot,
the less unique Archaeopteryx seems. The transition between dinosaurs and birds
was messy and gradual. Technically, all birds are dinosaurs. So, it's impossible
to find a dividing line where they
started being birds because they never
stopped being dinosaurs. Really, it's hard
to identify the first of anything but
it's worth trying to do it anyway
because it gives us insight into when and
how life evolved on Earth. And if you
want to learn more about the history of
life on Earth,
be on the lookout for upcoming
mini-series.
