Photo shows the simulated image of Pocket Biancheng fish. Researchers have found the first fully preserved jawed fish fossils from the Silurian period, about 423 million years ago, in Xiushan, Chongqing. (Photo provided to China News Service by Chongqing Planning and Natural Resources Bureau)
Photo shows the side view of the simulated image of Pocket Biancheng fish. According to the study, the discovery makes Chongqing one of the few places in the world where complete Silurian jawed fish have been found. (Photo provided to China News Service by Chongqing Planning and Natural Resources Bureau)
Photo shows the macro photograph of Biancheng fish fossil. The BianCheng fish fossil was only 2cm long, and the whole fish was probably about 4cm long when alive. Its jaw represents a newly discovered transition state between the jaws and teeth of modern fishes and the primitive Placodermi, providing important fossil evidence for the origin and evolution of the jaws and teeth of modern jawed animals, including humans. (Photo provided to China News Service by Chongqing Planning and Natural Resources Bureau)