Advanced Life Created in Two Ancient Explosions

A 565-million-year-old fossil from Newfoundland, Canada known as Fractofusus andersoni. This Ediacaran creature is among the earliest of the period and may have evolved following an "explosion" in biodiversity about 575 million years ago - 33 million years before the larger, better-known Cambrian explosion.
(Image credit: Bing Shen, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University)

Complex life on Earth may have blossomed during two "explosions," not one, a new study suggests.

Earth's biggest species diversification occurred 542 million years ago, during what's called the Cambrian explosion. But a similar and rapid burst in evolution occurred 33 million years prior, researchers now think. They've dubbed the event the Avalon explosion.

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Dave Mosher, currently the online director at Popular Science, writes about everything in the science and technology realm, including NASA's robotic spaceflight programs and wacky physics mysteries. He has written for several news outlets in addition to Live Science and Space.com, including: Wired.com, National Geographic News, Scientific American, Simons Foundation and Discover Magazine. When not crafting science-y sentences, Dave dabbles in photography, bikes New York City streets, wrestles with his dog and runs science experiments with his nieces and nephews.