7
NEWS
December 2023 ESRFnews
ESRF featured in Netf lix
documentary
The ESRF has been featured in a new
Netflix documentary about the life and
work of the palaeoanthropologist and
long-term user Lee Berger.
“Unknown: Cave of Bones” follows
Berger’s journey from his discovery of
the world’s oldest non-human graveyard
in South Africa, to his quest to prove that
an ancient, ape-like creature practiced
complex burial rituals.
Currently “Explorer in Residence”
at the National Geographic Society in
the US, but still an honorary professor
at the University of the Witwatersrand
in South Africa, where he has spent
most of his academic career, Berger
is famous for having discovered two
new species of early human relatives,
Australopithecus sediba and Homo
naledi. He first brought the two-
million-year-old fossilised remains
of A. sediba to scan at the ESRF in
2010. The resulting data from that,
and subsequent scans, have been
used in a large number of scientific
and popular publications, and have
resulted in significant breakthroughs in
understanding the origins of humanity.
In February last year, Berger brought
A. sediba to the ESRF once again, this
time accompanied by the specimen of
a H. naledi child’s skeleton and other
objects potentially tools embedded
in a large block of rock The fossils
were scanned at the flagship EBS
beamline BM18 with the process and
extraordinary results featured in the
Netflix documentary
I came to this place this amazing
gigantic machine because its the only
machine on the planet that can take
this child in a plaster jacket and scan it
down to a millionth of a metre so we can
determine whether it is buried with a
tool Berger says in the film
E S R F/V U E D I C I K R A F T, P. E T A L./N A T U R E
ID19 scan of the
underside of the
trilobite, with its
exoskeleton
coloured in tan.
Contents of the
digestive tract are
separated and
colour-coded into
various fossil
groups.
“The ESRF played an absolutely
pivotal role in this study,” says Ahlberg.
“This scan was made at the old ID19
beamline before the EBS upgrade –
even better results are possible now.
Still, the resolution and scan quality it
provided were essential in identifying
the gut contents, piece by piece. A
conventional CT scan would have told
us that the trilobite had been eating;
only the ESRF could tell us what it had
been eating.”
The images showed that the
trilobite’s diet consisted of a range of
small “benthic” invertebrates that
live on the sea bed, including ostracods
(small crustaceans with paired shells),
echinoderms (animals related to
modern starfish and sea urchins)
and hyolithids (cone-shaped animals
with no living representatives). The
researchers believe that B. incola was
an opportunistic scavenger that fed
on dead or living animals – those that
disintegrated easily or were small
enough to be swallowed whole.
It is also likely that the scavenger was
itself scavenged. The images betrayed
the vertical tracks of other scavengers
that burrowed into the trilobite’s
carcass, where they targeted the soft
tissue. As they avoided the gut, the
researchers suppose that the trilobite’s
digestive system was noxious, and
possibly a site of ongoing enzymatic
activity (Nature DOI: 10.1038/
s41586-023-06567-7).
X-rays expose trilobite’s last
meal, 465 million years later
The gut contents of a 465-million-
year-old fossilised trilobite have been
imaged at the ESRF by synchrotron
microtomography. The results shed
light on one of the most common fossil
arthropods, in terms of its feeding
habits and its role in Palaeozoic
ecosystems.
Trilobites are among the most iconic
fossils, and formed a highly diverse,
abundant and important component
of marine ecosystems during most of
their 270-million-year-long history
from the early Cambrian to the end
of the Permian periods. But while
more than 20,000 species have been
studied, their feeding habits have had
to be inferred indirectly, due to the lack
of reported specimens with internal
gut contents. In a public Czech
collection, a specimen of one trilobite,
Bohemolichas incola, has had partly
visible gut contents, but until now
these have not been imaged for fears
of destroying it.
As synchrotron microtomography is
non-destructive, a team of researchers
led by Per Erik Ahlberg at Uppsala
University in Sweden and Valéria
Vaškaninová at Charles University
in the Czech Republic decided to
use the technique on the rare fossil
at the ESRF’s ID19 beamline.
Here, phase-contrast synchrotron
microtomography allowed the
researchers to map the contents of the
gut in 3D at high resolution.