Key Points

Scientists have discovered that iron carbonate minerals, not phosphate, preserved delicate molecular traces in 300-million-year-old fossilized feces. This breakthrough reveals how biological information survives for hundreds of millions of years through microscopic time capsules. The research examined coprolites from the Mazon Creek fossil site and found consistent preservation patterns across diverse fossils. These findings provide powerful new tools to reconstruct ancient ecosystems and understand how prehistoric animals lived and interacted.

Key Points: Ancient Feces Reveal Iron Carbonate Preserved Prehistoric Molecules

  • Iron carbonate minerals preserved delicate molecular traces for 300 million years
  • Study examined coprolites from Mazon Creek fossil site in United States
  • Research reveals patterns of mineral-molecule preservation across diverse fossils
  • Findings enable targeted searches for biomolecules in specific fossil conditions
  • Cholesterol derivatives in feces provide evidence of ancient meat-based diets
3 min read

Fossilised faeces help bring prehistoric worlds to life, study reveals

Australian-led study discovers iron carbonate preserved 300-million-year-old molecular traces in fossilized feces, revolutionizing how scientists reconstruct ancient ecosystems and diets.

"Fossils don't just preserve the shapes of long-extinct creatures — they can also hold chemical traces of life. - Madison Tripp"

Sydney, Sep 20

An Australian-led study used prehistoric feces to uncover how molecular fossilization occurs, revealing new insights into what ancient animals ate, the world they lived in and what happened after they died. The study, published in the journal Geobiology, examined 300-million-year-old fossilized droppings, or "coprolites," mostly from the Mazon Creek fossil site in the United States, according to a statement released Friday by Australia's Curtin University.

The coprolites were already known to contain cholesterol derivatives, which is strong evidence of a meat-based diet, but the new research explored how those delicate molecular traces were preserved and survived the ravages of time.

Usually, soft tissues are fossilised due to phosphate minerals, but scientists from Australia, the United States, Sweden and Germany found molecules were preserved thanks to tiny grains of iron carbonate scattered throughout the fossil, acting like microscopic time capsules.

Study lead Madison Tripp, an Adjunct Research Fellow at Curtin’s School of Earth and Planetary Sciences, said the findings add a new dimension to how scientists understand molecular preservation, which is crucial to gaining insights into the ancient world.

“Fossils don’t just preserve the shapes of long-extinct creatures — they can also hold chemical traces of life,” Tripp said.

“But how those delicate molecules survive for hundreds of millions of years has long been a mystery: since phosphate minerals help preserve the fossil’s shape and structure, we might have expected these to also help preserve molecules – but we found instead that it was the iron carbonate that shielded the molecular traces inside.

“It’s a bit like discovering a treasure chest — in this instance phosphate — but the real gold is stashed in the pebbles nearby.”

"Carbonate minerals have been quietly preserving biological information throughout Earth's history," said Curtin University Professor Kliti Grice, adding expanded analysis of diverse fossils spanning different species, environments and eras confirmed consistent mineral-molecule preservation patterns.

To determine whether this mineral/molecule association was unique to the Mazon Creek site, researchers expanded the analysis to include a diverse range of fossils spanning different species, environments and time periods.

Founding Director of Curtin’s WA-Organic and Isotope Geochemistry Centre and ARC Laureate Fellow Professor Kliti Grice said this revealed the findings were consistent across the samples.

“This isn’t just a one-off or a lucky find: it’s a pattern we are starting to see repeated, which tells us carbonate minerals have been quietly preserving biological information throughout Earth’s history,” Professor Grice said.

“Understanding which minerals are most likely to preserve ancient biomolecules means we can be far more targeted in our fossil searches.

“Rather than relying on chance, we can look for specific conditions that give us the best shot at uncovering molecular clues about ancient life.”

Professor Grice said by revealing how biomolecules are preserved, scientists were gaining powerful new tools to reconstruct the world hundreds of millions of years ago.

“This helps us build a much richer picture of past ecosystems — not just what animals looked like, but how they lived, interacted, and decomposed,” Professor Grice said.

“It brings prehistoric worlds to life in molecular detail,” he was quoted as saying in a statement released by Curtin University.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Priya S
This is incredible! 300 million years old and still telling stories. Makes me wonder what future scientists will learn from our remains. The treasure chest analogy is perfect - sometimes the most valuable things are hidden in plain sight.
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Arjun K
While the science is impressive, I hope this research funding doesn't come at the cost of more pressing environmental issues we face today. Ancient poop is fascinating, but we need to focus on preserving current ecosystems too.
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Meera T
The cholesterol derivatives showing meat-based diet is fascinating! Imagine what else we can learn about ancient food chains. This could revolutionize our understanding of evolution and extinction patterns. Great work by the international team! 🌍
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Sarah B
As a biology student, this is absolutely mind-blowing! The fact that they found consistent patterns across different fossils means this isn't just luck. This could change how we approach paleontology completely. Time to look for more iron carbonate sites!
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Vikram M
Bahut badhiya research hai! From ancient poop to understanding entire ecosystems - science is truly amazing. Hope Indian researchers can collaborate on such projects too. We have so many fossil sites that could benefit from this approach.

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