The Cambrian explosion was a period of rapid multicellular growth. Most animal life during the Cambrian was aquatic. Trilobites were once assumed to be the dominant life form at that time, but this has proven to be incorrect. Arthropods were by far the most dominant animals in the ocean, but trilobites were only a minor part of the total arthropod diversity. What made them so apparently abundant was their heavy armor reinforced by calcium carbonate (CaCO3), which fossilized far more easily than the fragile
chitinous exoskeletons of other arthropods, leaving numerous preserved remains. The period marked a steep change in the diversity and composition of Earth's
biosphere. The
Ediacaran biota suffered a mass extinction at the start of the Cambrian Period, which corresponded with an increase in the abundance and complexity of burrowing behaviour. This behaviour had a
profound and irreversible effect on the substrate which transformed the
seabed ecosystems. Before the Cambrian, the sea floor was covered by
microbial mats. By the end of the Cambrian, burrowing animals had destroyed the mats in many areas through bioturbation. As a consequence, many of those organisms that were dependent on the mats became extinct, while the other species adapted to the changed environment that now offered new ecological niches. Around the same time there was a seemingly rapid appearance of representatives of all the mineralized
phyla, including the
Bryozoa, which were once thought to have only appeared in the Lower Ordovician. However, many of those phyla were represented only by stem-group forms; and since mineralized phyla generally have a benthic origin, they may not be a good proxy for (more abundant) non-mineralized phyla. '' from the
Burgess Shale, which were once believed to be
green algae, but are now understood to represent
hemichordates While the early Cambrian showed such diversification that it has been named the Cambrian Explosion, this changed later in the period, when there occurred a sharp drop in biodiversity. About 515 Ma, the number of species going extinct exceeded the number of new species appearing. Five million years later, the number of genera had dropped from an earlier peak of about 600 to just 450. Also, the
speciation rate in many groups was reduced to between a fifth and a third of previous levels. 500 Ma, oxygen levels fell dramatically in the oceans, leading to
hypoxia, while the level of poisonous
hydrogen sulfide simultaneously increased, causing another extinction. The later half of Cambrian was surprisingly barren and showed evidence of several rapid extinction events; the
stromatolites which had been replaced by reef building sponges known as
Archaeocyatha, returned once more as the archaeocyathids became extinct. This declining trend did not change until the
Great Ordovician Biodiversification Event. Marine life lived under low and fluctuating levels of
oxygen in the ocean. Upwellings of
anoxic deep ocean waters into shallow marine environments could push organisms over the edge into mass extinctions, leading ultimately to increased
biodiversity. and mineralizing animals were rarer than in future periods, in part due to the unfavourable
ocean chemistry. the Sinsk Algal Lens, the
Maotianshan Shales, the
Emu Bay Shale, and the Burgess Shale. ==Symbol==