<h2><SPAN name="II"></SPAN>II</h2>
<p class="h3">THE EARLIEST KNOWN VERTEBRATES</p>
<div class="inset16">
<p>"<i>We are the ancients of the earth<br/>
And in the morning of the times.</i>"<br/></p>
</div>
<p>There is a universal, and perfectly natural, desire
for information, which in ourselves we term
thirst for knowledge and in others call curiosity,
that makes mankind desire to know how everything
began and causes much speculation as to
how it all will end. This may take the form
of a wish to know how a millionaire made his
first ten cents, or it may lead to the questions—What
is the oldest animal? or, What is the
first known member of the great group of backboned
animals at whose head man has placed
himself? and, What did this, our primeval and
many-times-removed ancestor, look like? The
question is one that has ever been full of interest
for naturalists, and Nature has been interrogated
in various ways in the hope that she<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19">[19]</SPAN></span>
might be persuaded to yield a satisfactory answer.
The most direct way has been that of
tracing back the history of animal life by means
of fossil remains, but beyond a certain point
this method cannot go, since, for reasons stated
in various places in these pages, the soft
bodies of primitive animals are not preserved.
To supplement this work, the embryologist has
studied the early stages of animals, as their development
throws a side-light on their past
history. And, finally, there is the study of the
varied forms of invertebrates, some of which
have proved to be like vertebrates in part of
their structure, while others have been revealed
as vertebrates in disguise. So far these various
methods have yielded various answers, or the
replies, like those of the Delphic Oracle, have
been variously interpreted so that vertebrates
are considered by some to have descended from
the worms, while others have found their beginnings
in some animal allied to the King Crab.</p>
<p>Every student of genealogy knows only too
well how difficult a matter it is to trace a family
pedigree back a few centuries, how soon the
family names become changed, the line of descent<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20">[20]</SPAN></span>
obscure, and how soon gaps appear whose
filling in requires much patient research. How
much more difficult must it be, then, to trace
the pedigree of a race that extends, not over
centuries, but thousands of centuries; how wide
must be some of the gaps, how very different
may the founders of the family be from their
descendants! The words old and ancient that
we use so often in speaking of fossils appeal to
us somewhat vaguely, for we speak of the ancient
civilizations of Greece and Rome, and call
a family old that can show a pedigree running
back four or five hundred years, when such as
these are but affairs of yesterday compared
with even recent fossils.</p>
<p>Perhaps we may better appreciate the meaning
of these words by recalling that, since the
dawn of vertebrate life, sufficient of the earth's
surface has been worn away and washed into
the sea to form, were the strata piled directly
one upon the other, fifteen or twenty miles of
rock. This, of course, is the sum total of sedimentary
rocks, for such a thickness as this is not
to be found at any one locality; because, during
the various ups and downs that this world of<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21">[21]</SPAN></span>
ours has met with, those portions that chanced
to be out of water would receive no deposit of
mud or sand, and hence bear no corresponding
stratum of rock. The reader may think that
there is a great deal of difference between fifteen
and twenty miles, but this liberal margin
is due to the difficulty of measuring the thickness
of the rocks, and in Europe the sum of
the measurable strata is much greater than in
North America.</p>
<p>The earliest traces of animal life are found
deeper still, beneath something like eighteen
to twenty-five miles of rock, while below this
level are the strata in which dwelt the earliest
living things, organisms so small and simple
that no trace of their existence has been left,
and we infer that they were there because any
given group starts in a modest way with small
and simple individuals.</p>
<p>At the bottom, then, of twenty miles of rocks
the seeker for the progenitor of the great family
of backboned animals finds the scant remains
of fish-like animals that the cautious
naturalist, who is much given to "hedging,"
terms, not vertebrates, but prevertebrates or<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22">[22]</SPAN></span>
the forerunners of backboned animals. The
earliest of these consist of small bony plates,
and traces of a cartilaginous backbone from
the Lower Silurian of Colorado, believed to
represent relatives of Chimæra and species related
to those better-known forms Holoptychius
and Osteolepis, which occur in higher
strata. There are certainly indications of vertebrate
life, but the remains are so imperfect
that little more can be said regarding them,
and this is also true of the small conical teeth
which occur in the Lower Silurian of St. Petersburg,
and are thought to be the teeth of
some animal like the lamprey.</p>
<p>A little higher up in the rocks, though not
in the scale of life, in the Lower Old Red Sandstone
of England, are found more numerous
and better preserved specimens of another little
fish-like creature, rarely if ever exceeding
two inches in length, and also related (probably)
to the hag-fishes and lampreys that live
to-day.</p>
<p>These early vertebrates are not only small,
but they were cartilaginous, so that it was essential
for their preservation that they should<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23">[23]</SPAN></span>
be buried in soft mud as soon as possible after
death. Even if this took place they were later
on submitted to the pressure of some miles of
overlying rock until, in some cases, their remains
have been pressed out thinner than a
sheet of paper, and so thoroughly incorporated
into the surrounding stone that it is no easy
matter to trace their shadowy outlines. With
such drawbacks as these to contend with, it can
scarcely be wondered at that, while some naturalists
believe these little creatures to be related
to the lamprey, others consider that they belong
to a perfectly distinct group of animals, and
others still think it possible that they may be
the larval or early stages of larger and better-developed
forms.</p>
<p>Still higher up we come upon the abundant
remains of numerous small fish-like animals,
more or less completely clad in bony armor,
indicating that they lived in troublous times
when there was literally a fight for existence
and only such as were well armed or well
protected could hope to survive. A parallel
case exists to-day in some of the rivers of South
America, where the little cat-fishes would pos<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24">[24]</SPAN></span>sibly
be eaten out of existence but for the fact
that they are covered—some of them very
completely—with plate-armor that enables
them to defy their enemies, or renders them
such poor eating as not to be worth the taking.
The arrangement of the plates or scales in the
living Loricaria is very suggestive of the series
of bony rings covering the body of the ancient
Cephalaspis, only the latter, so far as we know,
had no side-fins; but the creatures are in no<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25">[25]</SPAN></span>
wise related, and the similarity is in appearance
only.</p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_053.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="300" alt="" /> Fig. 4.—Cephalaspis and Loricaria, an Ancient and a Modern Armored Fish.</div>
<p>Pterichthys, the wing fish, was another small,
quaint, armor-clad creature, whose fossilized remains
were taken for those of a crab, and once
described as belonging to a beetle. Certainly
the buckler of this fish, which is the part most
often preserved, with its jointed, bony arms,
looks to the untrained eye far more like some
strange crustacean than a fish, and even naturalists
have pictured the animal as crawling
over the bare sands by means of those same
arms. These fishes and their allies were once
the dominant type of life, and must have
abounded in favored localities, for in places are
great deposits of their protective shields jumbled
together in a confused mass, and, save
that they have hardened into stone, lying just
as they were washed up on the ancient beach
ages ago. How abundant they were may be
gathered from the fact that it is believed their
bodies helped consolidate portions of the strata
of the English Old Red Sandstone. Says Mr.
Hutchinson, speaking of the Caithness Flagstones,
"They owe their peculiar tenacity and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_26">[26]</SPAN></span>
durability to the dead fishes that rotted in their
midst while yet they were only soft mud.
For just as a plaster cast boiled in oil becomes
thereby denser and more durable, so the oily
and other matter coming from decomposing
fish operated on the surrounding sand or mud
so as to make it more compact."</p>
<p>It may not be easy to explain how it came
to pass that fishes dwelling in salt water, as
these undoubtedly did, were thus deposited in
great numbers, but we may now and then see
how deposits of fresh-water fishes may have
been formed. When rivers flowing through a
stretch of level country are swollen during the
spring floods, they overflow their banks, often
carrying along large numbers of fishes. As the
water subsides these may be caught in shallow
pools that soon dry up, leaving the fishes to
perish, and every year the Illinois game association
rescues from the "back waters" quantities
of bass that would otherwise be lost.
Mr. F. S. Webster has recorded an instance
that came under his observation in Texas,
where thousands of gar pikes, trapped in a lake
formed by an overflow of the Rio Grande, had<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
been, by the drying up of this lake, penned into
a pool about seventy-five feet long by twenty-five
feet wide. The fish were literally packed
together like sardines, layer upon layer, and a
shot fired into the pool would set the entire
mass in motion, the larger gars as they dashed
about casting the smaller fry into the air, a
score at a time. Mr. Webster estimates that
there must have been not less than 700 or 800
fish in the pool, from a foot and a half up to
seven feet in length, every one of which perished
a little later. In addition to the fish in
the pond, hundreds of those that had died previously
lay about in every direction, and one
can readily imagine what a fish-bed this would
have made had the occurrence taken place in
the past.</p>
<p>From the better-preserved specimens that do
now and then turn up, we are able to obtain a
very exact idea of the construction of the bony
cuirass by which Pterichthys and its American
cousin were protected, and to make a pretty
accurate reconstruction of the entire animal.
These primitive fishes had mouths, for eating is
a necessity; but these mouths were not associated<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
with true jaws, for the two do not, as might
be supposed, necessarily go together. Neither
did these animals possess hard backbones, and,
while Pterichthys and its relatives had arms or
fins, the hard parts of these were not on the
inside but on the outside, so that the limb was
more like the leg of a crab than the fin of a
fish; and this is among the reasons why some
naturalists have been led to conclude that vertebrates
may have developed from crustaceans.
Pteraspis, another of these little armored prevertebrates,
had a less complicated covering,
and looked very much like a small fish with its
fore parts caught in an elongate clam-shell.</p>
<p>The fishes that we have so far been considering—orphans
of the past they might be termed,
as they have no living relatives—were little fellows;
but their immediate successors, preserved
in the Devonian strata, particularly of North
America, were the giants of those days, termed,
from their size and presumably fierce appearance,
Titantichthys and Dinichthys, and are related
to a fish, <i>Ceratodus</i>, still living in Australia.</p>
<p>We know practically nothing of the external
appearance of these fishes, great and fierce<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
though they may have been, with powerful
jaws and armored heads, for they had no bony
skeleton—as if they devoted their energies to
preying upon their neighbors rather than to internal
improvements. They attained a length
of ten to eighteen feet, with a gape, in the large
species called Titanichthys, of four feet, and
such a fish might well be capable of devouring
anything known to have lived at that early
date.</p>
<p>Succeeding these, in Carboniferous times,
came a host of shark-like creatures known
mainly from their teeth and spines, for their
skeletons were of cartilage, and belonging to
types that have mostly perished, giving place
to others better adapted to the changed conditions
wrought by time. Almost the only living
relative of these early fishes is a little shark,
known as the Port Jackson Shark, living in
Australian waters. Like the old sharks, this
one has a spine in front of his back fins, and, like
them, he fortunately has a mouthful of diversely
shaped teeth; fortunately, because through their
aid we are enabled to form some idea of the
manner in which some of the teeth found scattered<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span>
through the rocks were arranged. For
the teeth were not planted in sockets, as they
are in higher animals, but simply rested on the
jaws, from which they readily became detached
when decomposition set in after death. To
complicate matters, the teeth in different parts
of the jaws were often so unlike one another
that when found separately they would hardly
be suspected of having belonged to the same
animal. Besides teeth these fishes, for purposes
of offence and defence, were usually armed
with spines, sometimes of considerable size and
strength, and often elaborately grooved and
sculptured. As the soft parts perished the
teeth and spines were left to be scattered by
waves and currents, a tooth here, another there,
and a spine somewhere else; so it has often
happened that, being found separately, two or
three quite different names have been given to
one and the same animal. Now and then some
specimen comes to light that escaped the
thousand and one accidents to which such
things were exposed, and that not only shows
the teeth and spines but the faint imprint of
the body and fins as well. And from such rare<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span>
examples we learn just what teeth and spines
go with one another, and sometimes find that
one fish has received names enough for an entire
school.</p>
<p>These ancient sharks were not the large and
powerful fishes that we have to-day—these
came upon the scene later—but mostly fishes
of small size, and, as indicated by their spines,
fitted quite as much for defence as offence.
Their rise was rapid, and in their turn they
became the masters of the world, spreading
in great numbers through the waters that covered
the face of the earth; but their supremacy
was of short duration, for they declined in
numbers even during the Carboniferous Period,
and later dwindled almost to extinction. And
while sharks again increased, they never reached
their former abundance, and the species that
arose were swift, predatory forms, better fitted
for the struggle for existence.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span></p>
<h3><i>REFERENCES</i></h3>
<p><i>The early fishes make but little show in a museum,
both on account of their small size and the conditions
under which they have been preserved. The Museum of
Comparative Zoölogy has a large collection of these
ancient vertebrates, and there is a considerable number of
fine teeth and spines of Carboniferous sharks in the
United States National Museum.</i></p>
<p><i>Hugh Miller's "The Old Red Sandstone" contains
some charming descriptions of his discoveries of Pterichthys
and related forms, and this book will ever remain a
classic.</i></p>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_061.jpg" width-obs="400" height-obs="149" alt="" /> Fig. 5.—Pterichthys, the Wing Fish.</div>
<hr class="chapter" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span></p>
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