Argonne scientists help solve mystery of prehistoric Tully Monster

The Tully Monster, an oddly configured sea creature with teeth at the end of a narrow, trunk-like extension of its head and eyes that perch on either side of a long, rigid bar, has finally been identified.

A Yale University-led team of paleontologists has determined that the 300-million-year-old animal—which grew to only a foot long—was a vertebrate, with gills and a stiffened rod (or notochord) that supported its body. It is part of the same lineage as the modern lamprey.

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“I was first intrigued by the mystery of the Tully Monster. With all of the exceptional fossils, we had a very clear picture of what it looked like, but no clear picture of what it was,” said Victoria McCoy, lead author of a new study published March 16 in the journal Nature. McCoy conducted her research as a Yale graduate student and is now at the University of Leicester.

The discovery was made possible with the help of the Advanced Photon Source, a U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science User Facility.

“The APS give scientists from Yale and the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago a revealing look at these prehistoric fossils that allowed them to see that these creatures had a backbone,” said Carmen Soriano, a study co-author and beamline scientist at Argonne, where the APS is located. “Until now, the Tully Monster had no clear affiliation inside the animal world. Our understanding of this extinct creature has been greatly improved.

“It is very satisfying to know,” she said, “that the APS had a significant role in allowing scientists to finally determine what position on the tree of life the Tully Monster belongs to, ending a scientific debate that has gone on since the Field Museum obtained its first fossil samples of the creature more than 50 years ago.”

For decades, the Tully Monster has been one of the great fossil enigmas: It was discovered in 1958, first described scientifically in 1966, yet never definitively identified even to the level of phylum (that is, to one of the major groups of animals). Officially known as Tullimonstrum gregarium, it is named after Francis Tully, the amateur fossil hunter who came across it in coal mining pits in northeastern Illinois.

Thousands of Tully Monsters eventually were found at the site, embedded in concretions—masses of hard rock that formed around the Tully Monsters as they fossilized. Tully donated many of his specimens to the Field Museum of Natural History, which collaborated on the Nature study along with Argonne.

The Tully Monster has taken on celebrity status in Illinois. It became the state fossil in 1989, and more recently, U-Haul trucks and trailers in Illinois began featuring an image of a Tully Monster.

“Basically, nobody knew what it was,” said Prof. Derek Briggs, curator of invertebrate paleontology at the Yale Peabody Museum of Natural History, and co-author of the study. “The fossils are not easy to interpret, and they vary quite a bit. Some people thought it might be this bizarre, swimming mollusk. We decided to throw every possible analytical technique at it.”

Using the Field Museum’s collection of 2,000 Tully Monster specimens, the team analyzed the morphology and preservation of various features of the animal. Powerful, new analytical techniques also were brought to bear, such as synchrotron elemental mapping, which illuminates an animal’s physical features by mapping the chemistry within a fossil.

The researchers concluded that the Tully Monster had gills and a notochord, which functioned as a rudimentary spinal cord. Neither feature had been identified in the animal previously.

“It’s so different from its modern relatives that we don’t know much about how it lived,” McCoy said. “It has big eyes and lots of teeth, so it was probably a predator.”

Some key questions about Tully Monsters remain unanswered, however. No one knows when the animal first appeared on Earth or when it went extinct. Its existence in the fossil record is confined to the Illinois mining site, dating back 300 million years.

“We only have this little window,” Briggs said.

Additional co-authors are Lydia Finney and Stefan Vogt from the Advanced Photon Source at Argonne; Erin Saupe, Lidya Tarhan, Sean McMahon, Christopher Whalen, Elizabeth Clark, Ross Anderson, Holger Petermann and Emma Locatelli from Yale; and former Yale researcher James Lamsdell, now at the American Museum of Natural History.