Abstract
Apart from within the Arumbera Sandstone that spans the Ediacaran–Cambrian boundary, the entire Neoproterozoic succession of the Amadeus Basin has been generally believed to be devoid of metazoan fossils, despite features of possible biogenic origin having been described in the earliest geological mapping reports. Herein are described a suite of curious, rounded impressions preserved upon the surface of a sandstone bed from the basal Neoproterozoic unit, the quartzitic Heavitree Formation that dates to ca 850 Ma. Compared with rounded structures of both organic and inorganic origin, these features resemble fossils of stranded medusae, both modern and ancient, and thereby add a potentially pelagic lifeform to previously described burrowing and sessile forms of likely metazoans, which are preserved as fossils/trace fossils within the Tonian period of the Neoproterozoic elsewhere in the basin. An organic origin for these features would support the contention that the Amadeus Basin harbours the earliest evidence that macroscopic life flourished, albeit briefly, some 215 million years prior to the start of the Ediacaran period and 250 million years before metazoans successfully colonised the late Ediacaran seas.
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