490-Million-Year-Old Arthropod Fossil Reveals Critical Insights into Evolutionary Gaps in the Fossil Record

A newly discovered species of Corcoranidae arthropod, identified as Magnicornaspis garwoodi, lived during the Furonian period, approximately 497 to 487 million years ago. This well-preserved specimen was unearthed near Quebec, Canada, and provides significant evidence that the Frondian gap—the evolutionary interval between the Cambrian explosion and the Ordovician Great Biodiversity Event—may reflect sampling bias rather than a genuine decline in biodiversity.

Dr. Russell Bicknell from Flinders University noted, “Paleontologists suggest this notable biodiversity decline might be tied to changes in ocean chemistry, a cooling climate, or environmental instability.” He emphasized that “perhaps we’ve overlooked the right sedimentary rocks or fossil-bearing deposits to fully understand the types of mollusks and early forms of life that existed during this period.”

The newly identified Magnicornaspis garwoodi arthropod is distinguished by its broad head shield, segmented body, and defensive spines, and is classified within the Corcoraceae group.

This remarkable specimen was found in the Rivière du Loup Formation near Quebec, Canada, making it one of the few known fossils from the Cambrian and Ordovician periods.

“Fossils play a crucial role in bridging gaps in our understanding of evolutionary history,” Bicknell and his colleagues stated.

“An increasing number of Furonian sites challenge the notion of a barren Late Cambrian world.” They highlighted that “with each new Furonian fossil find, the estimated gap narrows, revealing a more sophisticated ecosystem that thrived during the Late Cambrian.”

“These discoveries hint that Furonian ecosystems were both diverse and ecologically complex,” they added.

Importantly, these specimens come from a geological environment previously unrecognized for its exceptional preservation quality.

The discovery of Magnicornaspis garwoodi fits into a broader pattern of findings over the last two decades.

Dr. Julian Kimmig from Karlsruhe University of Technology and the Karlsruhe National Museum of Nature remarked, “The Frondian gap may not indicate a true biodiversity collapse, but rather a result of where scientific focus has been and the types of rocks studied.”

The discovery of Magnicornaspis garwoodi is detailed in a research paper published in BMC Biology.

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RDC Bicknell et al. 2026. A new, well-preserved arthropod discovered in the Furonian of Canada. BMC Biology 24, 119; doi: 10.1186/s12915-026-02617-4

Source: www.sci.news