21 LIFE GOES ON
ion.
Nine years later, in 1957, a sc in trange fossil in it, similar toa modern sea pen and exactly like some of trying totell everyone about ever since. turned it in to a paleontologist at tyof Leicester, at once as Precambrian. Young Mason got ure in treated as a precocious ill is in many books. the specimen wasnamed in his honor Chamia masoni.
today some of Sprigg’s original Ediacaran specimens, along een t time, canbe seen in a glass case in an upstairs room of tout and lovely Soutralian Museumin Adelaide, but t attract a great deal of attention. tely etcterns arerat and not terribly arresting to trained eye. tly small and disc-srailing ribbons. Fortey -bodiedoddities.”
till very little agreement about old, no mouto take in and discivematerials, and no internal organs o process teysays, “most of t, like soft,structureless and inanimate flatfis t, tures ic, meaning t from tissue. ition of jellyfisoday are triploblastic.
Some experts t animals at all, but more like plants or fungi. tinctions bet and animal are not als life fixed to a single spot and ing , and yet is ananimal. “o ts and animalsey. “t any rule t says you o bedemonstrably one or ther.”
Nor is it agreed t tral to anytoday (except possibly some jellyfisies see t, a stab at complexity t didn’t take, possibly because tcompeted by ticated animals of theCambrian period.
“today,” Fortey ten. “t tointerpret as any kind of ancestors of o follow.”
t ultimately t t