World's oldest jellyfish? Fossils found in B.C. are 1st of their kind

Five hundred million years ago, the ancient, shallow sea in what is now British Columbia teemed with unusual creatures unlike any alive today. But there’s one you’d recognize if it swam by: A jellyfish much like those that pulse through today’s oceans.

Scientists say fossils found in Canada’s Burgess Shale are the oldest-known creatures that we would recognize as jellyfish — and they were likely the terrors of the sea during the Cambrian geological period.

An artistic reconstruction shows a group of Burgessomedusa phasmiformis swimming 505 million years ago in the Cambrian sea, where it was believed to be one of the largest predators. (Christian McCall)

The jellyfish had a bell about 20

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