Fossil Reexamination Upends Octopus Origin Story

New synchrotron imaging reveals Mazon Creek specimen is not an ancient octopus after all.

Apr. 10, 2026 at 8:07am

A highly structured abstract painting in muted earth tones, featuring sweeping geometric arcs, concentric circles, and precise botanical spirals, conveying the complex evolutionary forces that have shaped the origins of the octopus.New evidence challenges long-held assumptions about the evolutionary origins of the octopus, reshaping our understanding of when and how this remarkable cephalopod lineage first emerged.Mazon Today

A fossil long believed to be one of the earliest known octopuses has been reexamined using advanced synchrotron imaging technology, revealing that the specimen is not an octopus at all. The fossil, found in the Mazon Creek fossil beds in Illinois, was initially described in 2000 as an eight-armed cephalopod, but the new analysis shows it is actually the remains of a different type of predator, likely a nautiloid. This finding significantly reshapes the timeline of octopus evolution, pushing the origins of the modern octopus lineage forward by hundreds of millions of years.

Why it matters

This discovery challenges a long-standing understanding of when octopuses first appeared in the fossil record and how their evolutionary history unfolded. It demonstrates the importance of revisiting old fossils with new technologies, as well as the provisional nature of scientific narratives that can be reshaped by better evidence and sharper questions.

The details

The Mazon Creek fossil, found in a treasure trove of ancient life preserved in siderite concretions, was initially hailed in 2000 as one of the earliest known octopuses, with eight presumed arms and other soft-tissue features reminiscent of modern cephalopods. However, when scientists rescanned the fossil using synchrotron imaging, a technology that uses extremely bright X-ray beams to peer into rock, the hidden details told a different story. Rather than the eight-armed silhouette of an octopus, the new analysis revealed the teeth and ceramic-like markers of a simpler, more enigmatic predator that shared the site with a nautiloid fossil. In other words, what was thought to be an ancient octopus was actually a mix of different organisms or misattributed features due to the fossil's preservation.

  • In 2000, researchers announced the discovery of what seemed to be a clear octopus fossil from the Mazon Creek site.
  • In the mid-2020s, scientists used synchrotron imaging to rescan the Mazon Creek fossil, revealing its true nature as the remains of a different type of predator, likely a nautiloid.

The players

Mazon Creek

A fossil-rich site in Illinois that has yielded a diverse array of ancient life preserved in siderite concretions.

Synchrotron imaging

A technology that uses extremely bright X-ray beams to peer into rock and reveal hidden details with astonishing clarity, allowing scientists to reexamine old fossils.

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What’s next

The revised timeline for octopus evolution will need to be further investigated and validated through additional fossil discoveries and analyses using advanced imaging techniques.

The takeaway

This discovery highlights the importance of revisiting old fossils with new technologies, as well as the provisional nature of scientific narratives that can be reshaped by better evidence and sharper questions. The reexamination of the Mazon Creek fossil significantly alters our understanding of when and how the octopus lineage first emerged.