The Ghost in the Genome: Why the Modern Synthesis Fails the Cambrian Explosion
The Cambrian explosion, occurring roughly 541 million years ago, remains biology’s most profound "detective story." Within a geological blink of eye—perhaps less than 10 million years—nearly all major animal body plans (phyla) appeared in the fossil record. From the armored trilobites to the predatory Anomalocaris, the suddenness of this diversification challenges our fundamental understanding of evolution. For decades, the Modern Synthesis (the mid-20th-century marriage of Darwinian natural selection and Mendelian genetics) has been the reigning framework for explaining life's history. However, as we dig deeper into the molecular mechanics of the Cambrian, a realization is dawning: DNA alone might not have been the primary driver. To understand this biological big bang, we must look toward epigenetics—the regulatory layer that sits above the genome. The Shortcomings of the Modern Synthesis The Modern Synthesis relies on a "bottom-up" view of evolution. It posit...