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New animal species that survived mass extinction event half a billion years ago found in a quarry in China
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New animal species that survived mass extinction event half a billion years ago found in a quarry in China

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Last updated: January 30, 2026 1:08 am
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Published: January 30, 2026
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Evolution’s big bang“It surprised us”More from CBS NewsGo deeper with The Free Press

Almost a hundred new animal species that survived a mass extinction event half a billion years ago have been discovered in a small quarry in China, scientists revealed Wednesday.

The treasure trove of fossils offers a rare glimpse into a cataclysmic event that brought a sudden end to the greatest explosion of life in our planet’s history.

The site where the fossils were found in the southern Chinese province of Hunan was “extraordinary,” Han Zeng of the Chinese Academy of Sciences told AFP.

“We have collected over 50,000 fossil specimens from a single quarry that is 12 meters high, 30 meters long and eight meters wide,” added the lead author of a new study in the journal Nature.

In this small space, the Chinese team uncovered more than 150 different species — 91 of them new to science — between 2021 and 2024.

Han described “wonderful experiences when we realized that those animals were right there on the rock.”

“Many fossils show soft parts including gills, guts, eyes and even nerves,” he added.

The fossil of the Cambrian Period marine arthropod Fuxianhuiid, with gut preserved, discovered in Hunan province in southern China and dating to around 512 million years, is seen in this photograph released on Jan. 28, 2026. The scale bar is 2 mm. 

Han Zeng/Handout via REUTERS


Among the species discovered were ancient relatives of worms, sponges and jellyfish.

They also found many arthropods — a family that includes modern-day crabs and insects — including spiny, stalk-eyed creatures called radiodonts which were the apex predator of the time.

The discovery is particularly exciting for scientists because of the period when these strange animals lived.

Evolution’s big bang

Life first emerged on Earth more than 3.5 billion years ago — but was little more than a layer of slime for most of our planet’s history.

Then came the Cambrian explosion, known as evolution’s “big bang,” roughly 540 million years ago. Suddenly, most of the major groups of animals alive today — including vertebrates which would eventually include humans — evolved and started populating the world’s oceans.

This burst of life is thought to have been driven by a rise in oxygen in Earth’s atmosphere.

However, it came to a sudden end when up to half of all animals died off 513 million years ago. This mass extinction, known as the Sinsk event, is thought to have been caused by declining oxygen levels.

The animals in the Chinese quarry, which were dated to around 512 million years ago, represent the first major discovery of soft-bodied fossils that lived directly after the Sinsk event, Han explained.

This means the fossils — dubbed the Huayuan biota after the county where they were found — “open a new window into what happened,” he added.

“It surprised us”

Michael Lee, an evolutionary biologist at the South Australian Museum not involved in the research, said “the new fossils from China demonstrate that the Sinsk event affected shallow water forms most severely.”

A deep-water fish called coelacanth similarly survived the mass extinction that wiped out all the dinosaurs that did not evolve into birds, he pointed out.

“The deep ocean is one of the most stable environments through geological time, in a similar way to how the cellar of a house is buffered from daily and seasonal changes and has less temperature fluctuations than the attic,” Lee told AFP.

Han said his team was also surprised that some of the animals in the quarry had also been found at Canada’s Burgess Shale site, which dates from an early period of the Cambrian explosion.

This suggests that these animals were already able to travel halfway across the world at this early stage, he added.

“It surprised us when we found the Huayuan biota shared various animals with the Burgess Shale, including the arthropods Helmetia and Surusicaris that were previously only known from the Burgess Shale,” Zeng told Reuters. “As larval stages are common in extant marine invertebrates, the best explanation of these shared taxa shall be that the larvae of early animals were capable of spreading by ocean currents since the early days of animals in the Cambrian.”

The Sinsk event is not considered among the best-known “Big Five” mass extinctions in our planet’s history.

Han said there is evidence of 18 or more mass extinctions over the last 540 million years, calling for more attention to be paid to the immensely destructive events.

Scientists have long debated whether dinosaurs were in decline before an asteroid smacked the Earth 66 million years ago, causing mass extinction. Recent research suggests dinosaur populations were still thriving in North America before the asteroid strike.

A research team in 2019 found that the steroid strike ignited a chaotic day of fires, earthquakes and tsunamis, which led to a prolonged period of global cooling.

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Go deeper with The Free Press

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