Reported by ABC Science, Friday (04/27/2012), scientists found that single cell organism that has evolved its findings suspect approximately one billion years ago. Cells are not the categories of living organisms such as animals, plants, parasites, fungi and algae, but the cells of early human species.
"We have found a branch of the tree of life (structural classification of living things) are not known to live in this lake. It is unique," said Kamran Shalchian Tabrizi, researchers from the University of Oslo.
According to Kamran, after all this time doing research in the area of the lake, he and his team have never found a rare species. "So far we know that no other group of organisms, in addition to these species," he said.
Scientists named the species is believed to be the ancestors of this man by the name Collodictyon. Collodictyon live in the mud of the lake approximately 30 kilometers from the southern Oslo region.
These organisms were found to have a length of 30 to 50 micrometers. These cells can only be seen through a microscope.
Collodictyon has a four flagella that resemble the tail rotor blades are used for moving. These findings also provide insight to scientists on the lives of living organisms that occur on the planet Earth since hundreds of millions of years ago.