Updated
Updated · ScienceDaily · Apr 27
Scientists trace vertebrate vision to 600-million-year-old median eye in ancient ancestor
Updated
Updated · ScienceDaily · Apr 27

Scientists trace vertebrate vision to 600-million-year-old median eye in ancient ancestor

6 articles · Updated · ScienceDaily · Apr 27
  • Researchers from Lund University and the University of Sussex found that the pineal gland in humans evolved from this ancient median eye.
  • Their study reveals that vertebrate eyes were rebuilt from a single central eye after earlier paired eyes were lost, explaining why vertebrate eyes differ from those of insects and squid.
  • This evolutionary detour clarifies the origin of neural circuits in the retina and shows how the pineal gland, now regulating sleep, is a living remnant of this primordial structure.
Did a 600-million-year-old worm's eye determine why humans are not nocturnal?
Our pineal gland is a fossil eye. Can it still 'see' light?
If our eyes evolved from a single 'cyclops' eye, what did we lose in the process?
Is the 'third eye' of ancient myth a memory of our evolutionary past?
Could manipulating our brain's 'inner eye' be the key to fixing modern sleep problems?