Abstract

Fossil melanosomes, micron-sized granules rich in melanin in vivo, provide key information for investigations of the original coloration, taxonomy and internal anatomy of fossil vertebrates. Such studies rely, in part, on analysis of the inorganic chemistry of preserved melanosomes and an understanding of melanosome chemical taphonomy. The extent to which the preserved chemistry of fossil melanosomes is biased by biotic and abiotic factors is, however, unknown. Here we report the discovery of hierarchical controls on the inorganic chemistry of melanosomes from fossil vertebrates from nine biotas. The chemical data are dominated by a strong biota-level signal, indicating that the primary taphonomic control is the diagenetic history of the host sediment. This extrinsic control is superimposed by a biological, tissue-level control; tissue-specific chemical variation is most likely to survive in fossils where the inorganic chemistry of preserved melanosomes is distinct from that of the host sediment. Comparative analysis of our data for fossil and modern amphibians reveals that most fossil specimens show tissue-specific melanosome chemistries that differ from those of extant analogues, strongly suggesting alteration of original melanosome chemistry. Collectively, these findings form a predictive tool for the identification of fossil deposits with well-preserved melanosomes amenable to studies of fossil colour and anatomy.

Highlights

  • Fossil melanosomes, micron-sized granules rich in melanin in vivo, provide key information for investigations of the original coloration, taxonomy and internal anatomy of fossil vertebrates

  • Evidence of melanin and melanosomes has been reported from fossils that vary in taxonomy, age and geological setting[14,15,22,24]; this broad distribution in the fossil record provides an excellent opportunity to investigate the controls on melanin and melanosome taphonomy

  • Fossil melanosomes vary in their mode of preservation

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Summary

Introduction

Micron-sized granules rich in melanin in vivo, provide key information for investigations of the original coloration, taxonomy and internal anatomy of fossil vertebrates. Such studies rely, in part, on analysis of the inorganic chemistry of preserved melanosomes and an understanding of melanosome chemical taphonomy. Comparative analysis of our data for fossil and modern amphibians reveals that most fossil specimens show tissue-specific melanosome chemistries that differ from those of extant analogues, strongly suggesting alteration of original melanosome chemistry These findings form a predictive tool for the identification of fossil deposits with well-preserved melanosomes amenable to studies of fossil colour and anatomy. Specimen # NHML-4999 NHML-4982 NHMB-MB.Am. 908 NHML-30271 NHML-35814 HMLD-Me7069 HLMD-Me5472 IVPP-V13314 IVPP-V18357 IVPP-STM36-86 IVPP-STM36-2 IVPP-STM5-12 IVPP-STM9-5 IVPP-V16525 CNU-VER-LB2009001 CNU-SAL-NN2013002P PIMUZ-T3412 PIMUZ-T3749 NHMB-MB.Am.1220 NHMD-155208 NHMB-MB.Am.1187

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