Loch Torridon in Scotland, where the microfossil was discovered. Photo:聽Stefan Krause, Germany, , via Wikimedia Commons.

The billion-year-old fossil of an organism, exquisitely preserved in the Scottish Highlands, reveals features of multicellularity nearly 400 million years before the biological trait emerged in the first animals, according to a in the journal Current Biology by an international team of researchers, including Boston College paleobotanist Paul Strother.

The discovery could be the 鈥渕issing link鈥 in the evolution of animals, according to the team, which included scientists from the University of Sheffield, in the UK. The microfossil, discovered at Loch Torridon, contains two distinct cell types and could be the earliest example of complex multicellularity ever recorded, according to the researchers.

The fossil offers new insight into the transition of single celled organisms to complex, multicellular animals. Modern single-celled holozoa include the most basal living animals and the fossil discovered shows an organism which lies somewhere between single cell and multicellular animals, or metazoa.

鈥淥ur findings show that the genetic underpinnings of cell-to-cell cohesion and segregation鈥攖he ability for different cells to sort themselves into separate regions within a multicellular mass鈥攅xisted in unicellular organisms a billion years ago, some 400 million years before such capabilities were incorporated into the first animals,鈥 said Strother, a research professor in the Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences at Boston College.

The fossil鈥檚 discovery in an inland lake shifts the focus on the first forms of early life from the ocean to freshwater.