When did the first fish live on Earth – and how do scientists figure out the timing?
- Written by Isaac Skromne, Assistant Professor of Biology, University of Richmond
The idea for radiometric dating first occurred to a New Zealand scientist named Ernest Rutherford[18] in 1904. His idea was to measure the number of uranium atoms and lead atoms in a rock and compare them. He predicted that an older rock would have more lead and less uranium than a younger rock would.
NOAA[19]The American scientist Bertram Boltwood[20] put Rutherford’s idea to the test, measuring the amount of uranium and lead in different rocks[21] collected from all over the world.
Once a rock is formed, no new elements are added to it. So scientists can calculate how much uranium the rock started with by adding what’s left to the amount of lead that’s there now, thanks to the radioactive decay process. Then, because they know exactly how long it takes for uranium to break down into lead, they can figure out the age of the rock. Boltwood proved that Rutherford’s idea worked, establishing the field of radiometric dating in 1907.
The making of the Haikouichthys fossil
Fossils are rocks[22]. So scientists can use radiometric dating to estimate how long ago the organisms that left the fossil imprint lived on Earth.
Animals leave fossil imprints only under special circumstances. In order for the Haikouichthys to leave fossils, their dead bodies would have had to sink to the bottom of the water and be covered with sediments before microorganisms could decompose them. Then, minerals in the sediments would have seeped into the Haikouichthys for their remains to become fossilized.
Dr. and Prof. Degan Shu, Shannxi Key Laborotory of Early Life and Envionment Department of Geology, Northwest UniversityRadiometric dating of Haikouichthys fossils suggests these animals were swimming in Earth’s waters between 518 million and 530 million years ago[23] – and possibly longer.
Earth’s age as a 24-hour day
Scientists, using radiometric dating, estimate the Earth itself is 4.5 billion years old[24]. For a long time on Earth, there was no life at all. Then microorganisms like bacteria showed up. It’s only relatively recently that plants and animals began living on Earth.
In fact, if you think of Earth’s age until now as a 24-hour day, it turns out Haikouichthys lived 2 hours and 45 minutes before the end of the day. Humanlike animals[25] appeared even more recently on Earth – about 5 million to 7 million years ago [26] – only a few minutes before the end of the hypothetical day.
Whether the Haikouichthys was the first fish or not remains controversial. There are very few other fishlike fossils from the same time period. But paleontologists keep digging. Who knows, maybe in a few years they will discover an even older fishlike animal that will dethrone Haikouichthys as the oldest fishlike creature.
Hello, curious kids! Do you have a question you’d like an expert to answer? Ask an adult to send your question to CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com[27]. Please tell us your name, age and the city where you live.
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References
- ^ Curious Kids (theconversation.com)
- ^ curiouskidsus@theconversation.com (theconversation.com)
- ^ oldest fossils of animals resembling a fish (doi.org)
- ^ head with seven to eight slits at its base that looked like gills (doi.org)
- ^ distinct spine surrounded by muscles (doi.org)
- ^ they didn’t have a jaw (www.science.org)
- ^ modern hagfish and lampreys (nhpbs.org)
- ^ appear not to have had side fins (doi.org)
- ^ scientists like me (scholar.google.com)
- ^ Radiometric dating (cosmosmagazine.com)
- ^ molecules, which make up everything around you (theconversation.com)
- ^ some, called radioactive atoms, are unstable (kids.britannica.com)
- ^ It breaks down very slowly into lead (kids.kiddle.co)
- ^ naturally in rocks and minerals (kids.kiddle.co)
- ^ 700 million years for one pound of uranium (www.livescience.com)
- ^ Unknown, published in 1939 in 'Rutherford: being the life and letters of the Rt. Hon. Lord Rutherford'/Wikimedia Commons (commons.wikimedia.org)
- ^ CC BY (creativecommons.org)
- ^ a New Zealand scientist named Ernest Rutherford (library.si.edu)
- ^ NOAA (oceanexplorer.noaa.gov)
- ^ American scientist Bertram Boltwood (www.pbs.org)
- ^ measuring the amount of uranium and lead in different rocks (www.lindahall.org)
- ^ Fossils are rocks (education.nationalgeographic.org)
- ^ swimming in Earth’s waters between 518 million and 530 million years ago (doi.org)
- ^ estimate the Earth itself is 4.5 billion years old (education.nationalgeographic.org)
- ^ Humanlike animals (australian.museum)
- ^ 5 million to 7 million years ago (www.smithsonianmag.com)
- ^ CuriousKidsUS@theconversation.com (theconversation.com)
Authors: Isaac Skromne, Assistant Professor of Biology, University of Richmond