DNAncient by James Penha

Genetic freeze frame
shows Edenic genesis
in Arctic subsoil

By James Penha

“Two-million-year-old DNA from northern Greenland has revealed that the region was once home to mastodons, lemmings and geese, offering unprecedented insights into how climate change can shape ecosystems.”

Quote from The Guardian article ‘DNA from 2m years ago reveals lost Arctic world’ from 7th December 2022.

Further reading:

https://www.theguardian.com/science/2022/dec/07/dna-from-2m-years-ago-reveals-lost-arctic-world?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-022-05453-y

Author bio:

Expat New Yorker James Penha  (he/him🌈) has lived for the past three decades in Indonesia. Nominated for Pushcart Prizes in fiction and poetry, his work is widely published in journals and anthologies. His newest chapbook of poems, American Daguerreotypes, is available for Kindle. His essays have appeared in The New York Daily News and The New York Times. Penha edits TheNewVerse.News, an online journal of current-events poetry. You can find out more about James’ poetry on his website https://jamespenha.com and catch up with him on Twitter @JamesPenha

Enjoyed James’ sciku? Check out more of his sciku here: ‘Quantumku‘, ‘If A Tree Talks in a Forest’, ‘Air-Gen-Ku’, and ‘Boys Whale Be Boys’.

Tiny predator

Cambrian fossil,
your pincers – a coat of arms.
Ancient arachnid.

The Burgess Shale in the Canadian Rockies has some of the most complete and well preserved fossils found anywhere in the world, allowing researchers to gain huge insights into life millions of years ago during the middle Cambrian period.

Now a new species has been described that illuminates the early development of chelicerate – a group of over 115,000 species that contains spiders, scorpions and horseshoe crabs.

In their paper Aria & Caron (2019) describe the morphology of Mollisonia plenovenatrix, including robust but short chelicerae (pincers) that were located between the animal’s eyes, in front of its mouth. These are the predecessors of the pincers that spiders and scorpions use to kill, hold and cut their prey.

It’s likely that the species hunted close to the sea floor, using long walking legs and other sensory limbs to detect prey. The finding suggests that the origin of the chelicerate must be earlier in the Cambrian period and that the group must have rapidly expanded to fill an underutilised ecological niche.

A note about the sciku: For the sake of the poem I have simplified chelicerate to arachnids. Lead author Cédric Aria has described the pincers (chelicerae) as the ‘coat of arms’ of the chelicerate which felt suitably poetic.

Original research: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41586-019-1525-4