Edrioasteroidea Billings, 1858

Kouchinsky, Artem, Bengtson, Stefan, Clausen, Sébastien & Vendrasco, Michael J., 2015, An early Cambrian fauna of skeletal fossils from the Emyaksin Formation, northern Siberia, Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 60 (2), pp. 421-512 : 494

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.4202/app.2012.0004

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03C3891D-1565-C23B-FFF5-FCE6CA7CFC57

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Edrioasteroidea Billings, 1858
status

 

Class Edrioasteroidea Billings, 1858 Order and family uncertain

Edrioasteroid thecal plates

Fig. 64A–F View Fig .

Material.—Five disarticulated plates, SMNH Ec 31511– 31515, from sample 7/70, two plates from sample K1-3B, and one, SMNH Ec 31516, from sample 7/64. Emyaksin Formation, Bol’shaya Kuonamka and Malaya Kuonamka rivers; uppermost Judomia Zone , upper Atdabanian Stage (sample 7/64) and Calodiscus-Erbiella Zone, lower Botoman Stage.

Description.—Plates triangular or trapezoidal, nearly symmetrical in plan view and curved claw-like in the lateral view. They consist of a concave and an opposite convex triangular or trapezoidal surface, perpendicular to a slightly concave and smooth face surrounded by a rounded rim ( Fig. 64B View Fig 3 View Fig , C 1 View Fig , D, arrowed). The two sides converge towards an embayed rounded edge. The embayments are produced by four to six more or less distinct ridges radiating from the face on the concave surface of the plate. These ridges are divided into two sets and are situated almost bilaterally symmetrically on the plate. The median pair of ridges runs almost parallel, whereas the lateral ones diverge. The opposite surface lacks ridges ( Fig. 64B View Fig 2 View Fig ).

Remarks.—Similar plates were illustrated by Hinz (1987: pl. 15; 11), from the Lower Comley Limestone Callavia Zone of Avalonian Britain (correlated with the upper Atdabanian– lower Botoman Stages ( Brasier 1989b; Brasier et al. 1992), by Landing and Bartowski (1996: 755, fig. 8) and Skovsted (2006: figs. 7.7, 7.8), from the Bonnia-Olenellus Zone of Laurentia correlated with Cambrian Stage 4. Two apparently similar plates were also described by Rozhnov et al. (1992: pl. 6: 8, 9) from the uppermost Atdabanian Stage of southeastern Siberian Platform. The plates were tentatively regarded by Landing and Bartowski (1996) as edrioasteroid ambulacral plates, based on comparision with the middle Cambrian Totiglobus Bell and Sprinkle, 1978 and with the late early Cambrian echinoderm plates illustrated by Sprinkle (1973: pl. 25) that were later identified as edrioasteroid plates by Sprinkle (see Landing and Bartowski 1996: 755). Plates described by Hinz (1987), Landing and Bartowski (1996), and herein are different, however, from the plates of the mouth frame of Totiglobus , which carry sets of more regular deeper vertical parallel ridges and notches oriented along the plate peristomal margin. They are more similar to the plates from the basal attachment disc of Totiglobus , which bear parallel to radiating ridges along their inner and outer surfaces ( Bell and Sprinkle 1978; Clausen and Peel 2012). Together with the ambulacral plate (see below), the edrioasteroid plates described herein are among the oldest occurrences of edrioasteroids, demonstrating that the latter were already widespread in Cambrian Stage 4 ( Clausen and Peel 2012; Zamora et al. 2013).

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