One of his videos provided the missing piece to link 400-year-old fossils with living euglenoids.
And it helped them solve a scientific mystery that's confused biologists for decades.
To find ancient evidence of euglenoids, van de Schootbrugge and his colleagues looked at microfossils — teensy fossils that are only a few millimeters in size.
AdvertisementA chance viewing of a YouTube video helped van de Schootbrugge and his colleagues link the fossils and living euglenoids.
The proof was in a pond (and on YouTube)There were two main problems with the cyst microfossils: what they were called and what they looked like.
Persons:
Fabian Weston, —, who's, Euglenoids, Bas, de, de Schootbrugge, they've, van de Schootbrugge, van de Schootbrugge's, Paul Strother, Strother, Van de Schootbrugge, Wilson Taylor
Organizations:
Service, Utrecht University, YouTube, New South Wales, University of Wisconsin, Eau Claire
Locations:
New South, Vouliagmeni, Greece