Tbohinc
Premium Member
Sept. 22, 2008 -- Australian scientists said Monday they had discovered in an outback mountain range a reef that was under water 650 million years ago and could provide fresh insight into early life on Earth.
The University of Melbourne researchers said the find could reveal fossils of the earliest examples of primitive animal life and also help trace the pattern of global climate change.
The reef is believed to have existed for between five and 10 million years during a period of tropical climate squeezed between two major ice age events, said researcher Jonathan Giddings.
"It provides a significant step forward in showing the extent of climate change in Earth's past and the evolution of ancient reef complexes -- and it also contains fossils which may be of the earliest known primitive animals," he said.
The University of Melbourne researchers said the find could reveal fossils of the earliest examples of primitive animal life and also help trace the pattern of global climate change.
The reef is believed to have existed for between five and 10 million years during a period of tropical climate squeezed between two major ice age events, said researcher Jonathan Giddings.
"It provides a significant step forward in showing the extent of climate change in Earth's past and the evolution of ancient reef complexes -- and it also contains fossils which may be of the earliest known primitive animals," he said.