380 million-year-old remains of giant fish found in Australia. Its 'living fossil' descendant, the coelacanth, is still alive today.

Researchers have discovered a new extinct species of coelacanth that lived 380 million years ago.

An illustration of a purple fish
The coelacanth Ngamugawi wirngarri in its Devonian reef habitat. 
(Image credit: Katrina Kenny)

What do the ginkgo (a tree), the nautilus (a mollusc) and the coelacanth (a fish) all have in common?

They don't look alike, and they aren't biologically related, but part of their evolutionary history bears a striking resemblance: these organisms are referred to as "living fossils". In other words, they appear to have escaped the transformations that normally come about over time, through evolution.

Richard Cloutier
Professor of Evolutionary Biology, Université du Québec à Rimouski (UQAR)

Dr. Richard Cloutier trained as a geologist and biologist at the Université du Québec à Montréal and completed two postdocs in London. Over the years, Dr. Cloutier has completed paleontological field work in Canada, USA, Europe and Asia. Dr. Cloutier has published over 150 scientific papers in paleontology, ichthyology and evolutionary biology as well as scientific books.