A revision of helicoplacoids and other early Cambrian echinoderms of North America

The Lower Cambrian rocks of North America contain the remains of several species of echinoderms, including helicoplacoids, the eocrinoids Gogia, Lepidocystis, and Kinzercystis, and the edrioasteroids Camptostroma and Stromatocystites. Camptostroma roddyi Ruedemann, 1933 is a large echinoderm from th...

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Main Author: Wilbur, Bryan Charles
Other Authors: Sprinkle, James
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2005
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3994
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record_format openpolar
spelling ftunivtexas:oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/3994 2023-05-15T17:23:00+02:00 A revision of helicoplacoids and other early Cambrian echinoderms of North America Wilbur, Bryan Charles Sprinkle, James 2005 electronic application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3994 eng eng b70709300 http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3994 244390207 Copyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works. Echinodermata Fossil--North America Geology Stratigraphic--Cambrian Thesis 2005 ftunivtexas 2021-09-23T17:11:05Z The Lower Cambrian rocks of North America contain the remains of several species of echinoderms, including helicoplacoids, the eocrinoids Gogia, Lepidocystis, and Kinzercystis, and the edrioasteroids Camptostroma and Stromatocystites. Camptostroma roddyi Ruedemann, 1933 is a large echinoderm from the Lower Cambrian Kinzers Formation of southeastern Pennsylvania. The animal has a unique dual-layered oral surface, and a large aboral suction pad used for attachment to skeletal debris. Thought by some authors to be ancestral to the edrioasteroids, it clearly belongs in a clade with the other early edrioasteroids. Helicoplacoids are from the Lower Cambrian Poleta Formation and equivalent units across the western edge of North America. The group was thought to be represented by nine species; this number is reduced here to three species, with the remainder of helicoplacoid disparity accounted for by vii ontogenetic variation. These triradiate spindle-shaped echinoderms were capable of expansion and contraction by means of cloacal pumping, and attached to skeletal debris or semi-lithified matgrounds by means of a suction pad. Rather than representing an ancestral triradiate form that served as the template for a “2- 1-2” ambulacral arrangement, these disparate echinoderms are derived from the ancestral pentameral edrioasteroid bauplan. Gogia is well represented in the Lower Cambrian rocks of California and Nevada by five species, four of which are new and are described here. This is now understood to be the most diverse echinoderm genus from the Early Cambrian. Members of this group attached to skeletal debris by using a suction pad, and fed by employing retractable spiraled brachioles. Stromatocystites walcotti Schuchert, 1919 is from Lower Cambrian rocks from Bonne Bay, Newfoundland. It is a flat edrioasteroid with a retractable suctorial aboral surface devoid of a pad. This morphologic feature delineates the group from other Middle Cambrian Stromatocystites, warranting renaming herein. A tree generated for these groups shows that helicoplacoids, Gogia, Imbricata, and the eocrinoids (Gogia + Imbricata) all constitute monophyletic groups, while edrioasteroids are polyphyletic. Early Cambrian echinoderms are found with only one or (rarely) two species occupying the same morphospace, a pattern repeated by Middle Cambrian groups. Geological Sciences Thesis Newfoundland The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Texas at Austin: Texas ScholarWorks
op_collection_id ftunivtexas
language English
topic Echinodermata
Fossil--North America
Geology
Stratigraphic--Cambrian
spellingShingle Echinodermata
Fossil--North America
Geology
Stratigraphic--Cambrian
Wilbur, Bryan Charles
A revision of helicoplacoids and other early Cambrian echinoderms of North America
topic_facet Echinodermata
Fossil--North America
Geology
Stratigraphic--Cambrian
description The Lower Cambrian rocks of North America contain the remains of several species of echinoderms, including helicoplacoids, the eocrinoids Gogia, Lepidocystis, and Kinzercystis, and the edrioasteroids Camptostroma and Stromatocystites. Camptostroma roddyi Ruedemann, 1933 is a large echinoderm from the Lower Cambrian Kinzers Formation of southeastern Pennsylvania. The animal has a unique dual-layered oral surface, and a large aboral suction pad used for attachment to skeletal debris. Thought by some authors to be ancestral to the edrioasteroids, it clearly belongs in a clade with the other early edrioasteroids. Helicoplacoids are from the Lower Cambrian Poleta Formation and equivalent units across the western edge of North America. The group was thought to be represented by nine species; this number is reduced here to three species, with the remainder of helicoplacoid disparity accounted for by vii ontogenetic variation. These triradiate spindle-shaped echinoderms were capable of expansion and contraction by means of cloacal pumping, and attached to skeletal debris or semi-lithified matgrounds by means of a suction pad. Rather than representing an ancestral triradiate form that served as the template for a “2- 1-2” ambulacral arrangement, these disparate echinoderms are derived from the ancestral pentameral edrioasteroid bauplan. Gogia is well represented in the Lower Cambrian rocks of California and Nevada by five species, four of which are new and are described here. This is now understood to be the most diverse echinoderm genus from the Early Cambrian. Members of this group attached to skeletal debris by using a suction pad, and fed by employing retractable spiraled brachioles. Stromatocystites walcotti Schuchert, 1919 is from Lower Cambrian rocks from Bonne Bay, Newfoundland. It is a flat edrioasteroid with a retractable suctorial aboral surface devoid of a pad. This morphologic feature delineates the group from other Middle Cambrian Stromatocystites, warranting renaming herein. A tree generated for these groups shows that helicoplacoids, Gogia, Imbricata, and the eocrinoids (Gogia + Imbricata) all constitute monophyletic groups, while edrioasteroids are polyphyletic. Early Cambrian echinoderms are found with only one or (rarely) two species occupying the same morphospace, a pattern repeated by Middle Cambrian groups. Geological Sciences
author2 Sprinkle, James
format Thesis
author Wilbur, Bryan Charles
author_facet Wilbur, Bryan Charles
author_sort Wilbur, Bryan Charles
title A revision of helicoplacoids and other early Cambrian echinoderms of North America
title_short A revision of helicoplacoids and other early Cambrian echinoderms of North America
title_full A revision of helicoplacoids and other early Cambrian echinoderms of North America
title_fullStr A revision of helicoplacoids and other early Cambrian echinoderms of North America
title_full_unstemmed A revision of helicoplacoids and other early Cambrian echinoderms of North America
title_sort revision of helicoplacoids and other early cambrian echinoderms of north america
publishDate 2005
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3994
genre Newfoundland
genre_facet Newfoundland
op_relation b70709300
http://hdl.handle.net/2152/3994
244390207
op_rights Copyright is held by the author. Presentation of this material on the Libraries' web site by University Libraries, The University of Texas at Austin was made possible under a limited license grant from the author who has retained all copyrights in the works.
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