Swiss Research Breakthrough: Why Some Animals Become Fossils
University of Lausanne scientists reveal groundbreaking findings on fossil preservation, showing how animal size and protein content determine fossilization likelihood.
University of Lausanne scientists reveal groundbreaking findings on fossil preservation, showing how animal size and protein content determine fossilization likelihood.

"It is therefore quite possible that some organisms could never be preserved in fossil form and that we will therefore never be able to observe them at all or only with great difficulty."
"The decisive factor is the body of the animals themselves."
History is not written by the victors; in paleontology, it is written by the massive and the protein-rich. A groundbreaking study released Thursday by the University of Lausanne (Unil) has shattered previous assumptions about the fossil record, revealing that the very chemical makeup of an animal determines its place in history. Published in the prestigious journal Nature Communications, the research confirms a stark reality: size matters.
The findings are definitive. Large arthropodsâcreatures boasting jointed legs such as crabs, spiders, and insectsâpossess a significant biological advantage over their smaller counterparts. While massive, protein-dense organisms are primed for preservation, smaller, simply built animals like flatworms face near-certain obliteration from the geological record. This is not merely a matter of chance; it is a chemical inevitability dictated by the body of the animal itself. The implications are profound, suggesting that our current understanding of prehistoric life is heavily skewed toward the heavyweights of the animal kingdom, while the microscopic majority vanishes without a trace.
Fossils are far more than mere bones; they are chemical miracles. The Swiss research team has cracked the code on why spectacular soft-tissue specimensâpreserving muscles, intestines, and even brainsâsurvive for millions of years while others rot away. The secret lies in a self-generated suffocating environment. Through rigorous laboratory experimentation, researchers decomposed shrimps, snails, starfish, and worms under controlled conditions to witness the process in real-time.
The results were striking. Larger, protein-rich animals rapidly generate a low-oxygen environment as they decompose. This chemical shift is critical. By effectively choking off the oxygen supply, these carcasses inhibit the very decomposition process that seeks to destroy them, locking in their biological structure for the ages. In contrast, low-protein organisms fail to trigger this protective mechanism, leaving them vulnerable to total decay. This discovery fundamentally alters our understanding of taphonomyâthe study of how organisms decay and become fossilizedâproving that the animal effectively engineers its own immortality.
We are looking at a broken mirror of the past. The Unil study forces us to confront an uncomfortable truth: vast swathes of evolutionary history may be lost forever. Nora CorthĂŠsy, the studyâs lead author, delivers a sobering assessment of the fossil record's limitations. "It is therefore quite possible that some organisms could never be preserved in fossil form," she asserts, warning that we may never observe these creatures at all.
This "preservation bias" creates a massive blind spot in science. While we marvel at the preserved anatomy of ancient arthropods, an entire shadow ecosystem of soft-bodied, low-protein organisms likely thrived and perished without leaving a single footprint in the stone. The fossil record is not a complete library of life; it is a highlight reel of the chemically fortunate. This realization challenges paleontologists to rethink biodiversity estimates and acknowledge the silent, invisible majority that once populated our oceans and lands.
Switzerland continues to cement its status as a global powerhouse in scientific research. This latest breakthrough from the University of Lausanne demonstrates the nation's capacity to drive critical advancements in understanding our world's history. By combining rigorous biological experimentation with geological inquiry, Swiss researchers are not just digging up bones; they are decoding the fundamental laws of nature.
This study follows a tradition of excellence, coming shortly after Zurich researchers identified a new squid species, playfully naming it after the Swiss-German shibboleth Chuchichäschtli. Whether identifying new species or explaining the molecular mechanics of decay, Swiss institutions are at the forefront of paleontological discovery. As this new data ripples through the scientific community, it serves as a reminder: to understand the future of our biodiversity, we must rely on the precise, innovative research being conducted right here in Switzerland.