Comment on What can we learn from this prehistoric organism with no anus?

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Sal@mander.xyz ⁨2⁩ ⁨years⁩ ago

The paper can be found here: https://drive.google.com/file/d/13PcNRqAZQ5frLajaP2V7UDH3NzDRLCQ6/view

The wiki page also has a summary of this topic: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saccorhytus

These fossils were discovered in 2017, and are dated to be about 540 million years old. The guys that originally discovered pointed out that the morphology of this organism had similarities to the embryos of the group of animals that humans belong to, suggesting that it could represent an evolutionary ancestor.

In this paper, what the researchers did was to look at the morphology more closely by using more powerful microscopy techniques, and they reached a different interpretation. According to them, these organisms actually belong to a group of animals that is known to have split from our evolutionary branch a while ago. So, these belong to a "sister" group and not to an ancestor.

Here is the image in the paper where they show the evolutionary relationship on the basis of the morphology as they interpret it. This 'Saccorhytus' is shown in red, and the group that contains the humans (Deuterostome) in green:

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