Hayley ([info]blasphemusfish) wrote in [info]wtf_nature,

Amazing beetle fossils



"Even after being locked in rock for millions of years, some ancient beetle fossils retain a metallic rainbow sheen. But a new study finds that these bugs undergo changes during fossilization that makes them look slightly redder than they did in life.

Beetles flash some of the most intense colors in nature. The intensity is due to layers of light-scattering materials on the insects' exoskeletons. Many fossils of beetles retain these color-creating structures, but studies on whether the fossils preserve the original colors truthfully have been inconclusive."




"To reveal the insects' true colors, Yale University postdoctoral researcher Maria McNamara and her colleagues took tiny samples from beetle fossils dating back 15 million to 47 million years that were found in various spots in Germany and Idaho. The researchers analyzed the samples using a scanning electron microscope and a transmission electron microscope, both tools that use beams of electrons to create higher-resolution images of an object than could be produced using a light microscope.

The analysis revealed that the structures in the beetle exoskeletons remained virtually unchanged after fossilization, but there was a subtle shift in the way that light traveled through those structures. It seems that the biochemistry of the insects changes during fossilization, the researchers reported today (Sept. 27) in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B, slightly lengthening the wavelengths of the light refracted by the beetle's armor."



"Longer wavelengths of light appear redder, so the fossilized bugs are slightly redder than they were before preservation.

The finding allowed the researchers to correct for this red shift, revealing the original colors of the prehistoric beetles. Understanding the shift will also help researchers predict the presence and original color of ancient insects ranging from dragonflies to butterflies."

Original article here at Livescience.com, with photo gallery!

Edit:
Thought I'd add a link to the Wired article, for some nifty scanning electron micrographs.

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  • 11 comments

[info]zero_bug

January 6 2012, 01:09:19 UTC 4 months ago

These are absolutely glorious!

[info]spartan_117

January 6 2012, 01:25:32 UTC 4 months ago

Gorgeous

[info]rubyelf

January 6 2012, 02:26:25 UTC 4 months ago

Amazing fossils! And thanks for the links!

[info]nutmeg3

January 6 2012, 03:53:16 UTC 4 months ago

Those are beautiful!

[info]china_kitty

January 6 2012, 04:25:42 UTC 4 months ago

WOW! I am quite amazed that those beetles still kept the metallic sheen after being fossilized. Thanks for posting this!

[info]rahni

January 6 2012, 07:03:04 UTC 4 months ago

Wow pretty! Reminds me of ammolite.

[info]shadsdf

January 6 2012, 13:48:27 UTC 4 months ago

This is so awesome! I had no idea iridescence could fossilize.

[info]kincajou

January 6 2012, 14:24:24 UTC 4 months ago

it is very strange, how these fragile creatures compete against millions years of death. Die young stay pretty, huh

[info]blasphemusfish

January 6 2012, 14:26:54 UTC 4 months ago

It turns out their colours aren't made from chemical pigments, but rather the actual structure of their shells. Even with fossilisation, the structure remains similar to when the beetles were alive and still refract light, but they do appear more red than they would have in life C:

[info]kincajou

January 6 2012, 14:31:26 UTC 4 months ago

yeas, I know that. Iridescence, interfence, phase shifts, etc. Ideal pigment is no-such-pigment

[info]blasphemusfish

January 6 2012, 14:32:17 UTC 4 months ago

Oh my bad. I guess Ii didn't see it as strange, rare and freaking amazing - yes.
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