Fossils (DK Smithsonian Handbook) by DK
Fossils (DK Smithsonian Handbook) by DK
Fossils (DK Smithsonian Handbook) by DK
FOSSILS
DAVID J. WARD
Photography by
COLIN KEATES ABIPP
AUTHOR’S INTRODUCTION
Fossil collecting is a fascinating hobby specimens, and the academic challenge
which has grown considerably in of identifying fossil finds. There are few
popularity over the last few decades. other branches of science in which a
Its appeal is understandable; it combines beginner can make a serious contribution
the excitement of discovery with the to the knowledge of our planet’s
practical skills of collecting and preparing remarkable prehistory.
CLASSIFICATION
Fossils are usually referred to by their
two-part scientific name, although
a few have popular or
informal names as well.
Diplomystus
(fish)
Introduction | 7
large temporal
opening illustration
showing a typical
abbreviations species of the fossil
used in this genus in life. Under
jaw
band are articulation Skull the illustration is
E. = Early; Typical length a measurement
M. = Middle; 3m (10ft)
which gives an
L. = Late indication of the
organism’s size
Range: Middle–Late Jurassic Distribution: Europe, S. America Occurrence:
WHAT IS A FOSSIL?
FOSSILS ARE THE REMAINS of long- life (known as a trace fossil). For
dead plants and animals that have partly fossilization to occur, rapid burial,
escaped the rotting process and have, usually by water-borne sediment,
after many years, become part of is required. This is often followed by
the Earth’s crust. A fossil may be the chemical alteration, where minerals
preserved remains of the organism may be added or removed. The
itself, the impression of it in the replacement by and/or addition of
sediment, or marks made by it in minerals usually aids preservation.
Fossil dung
Trace fossils are true fossils. This dropping
(below left) is probably from an extinct shark.
It is usually difficult to relate coprolites to the
animal that produced them.
Reptile footprint
While difficult to identify to a particular
species, fossil footprints (above) can
provide valuable information about
the organism’s behaviour, such as Horse tooth
speed, weight, and mode of life. This cheek tooth (below)
looks like that of a modern
horse, but is actually a
fossil. Over the centuries,
its organic tissue has been
Mummified frog replaced by strengthening
Mummification – mineral salts, ensuring
the natural drying of an its preservation.
organism – has meant that the
frog (right) has progressed part of
the way towards becoming a fossil.
To ensure proper preservation,
it must become entombed in
a medium that would guard
against further decomposition.
Banded flint
Flints (right) are sometimes mistaken for fossils.
During formation, flint can be deposited in bands.
With a little weathering and staining, these flints can
resemble fossil corals, molluscs, worms, and trilobites.
Introduction | 11
Foot-shaped
Cretaceous flints come in many
forms; this one resembles a
human foot (below).
Some flints are
crustacean burrow
infills; if so they
are regarded as
trace fossils.
HOW FOSSILIZATION OCCURS become fossilized. This often occurs when the
Fossilization is, at best, a risky process which relies organism decaying in the sediment alters the
on a chain of favourable circumstances. The vast local conditions and promotes the incorporation
majority of the plants and animals that have ever of mineral salts within its structure, a process
lived have completely disappeared without trace, known as mineralization. This chemical change
leaving no fossil record. With rare exceptions, it is often enables the fossil to become more resistant
only the skeletal or hard parts of an organism that than the surrounding sediment.
Fossilization
After death an organism may slowly
c a disintegrate (a) or become buried in
Water column soft sediment (b). However, it may be
disturbed or digested by sediment-
feeding organisms, or current or wave
activity may re-expose it (c). As the
d b sediment compacts and the complex
chemical reactions of diagenesis occur,
the potential fossil may be dissolved (d).
Soft sediment But if the sediment is sufficiently
consolidated, a mould may be
formed (e). Percolating mineral
Consolidated sediment solutions may infill the mould,
g creating a cast (f). Some enter
the sediment relatively unaltered
e i by mineralization (g). If buried
and subjected over time to
increased temperature and
pressure, sedimentary rocks
become softened and distorted
(metamorphosed), and ultimately
f destroyed (h). As rocks are folded,
uplifted, and eroded, buried
fossils may be exposed on
the surface (i).
h
Metamorphic rock
12 | Introduction
MODES OF PRESERVATION
TO BECOME preserved as a fossil, some these cases, the living organism has been
of the normal processes of decay must caught in the sticky substance (tar or resin)
be permanently arrested. This usually which has then been fossilized, ensuring
involves isolating the organisms that preservation. If limestone, phosphate,
cause decay from the air or water, and or pyrite is deposited in the sediment
then filling any voids in the hard tissue surrounding a decaying plant, it forms a
with additional minerals. The vast “tomb” that may preserve very fine details of
majority of fossils are, therefore, found in the organism. Silicified or petrified wood can
freshwater or marine sediments, where produce spectacular colour effects, although
oxygen-deprived silt or clay has buried the cell preservation itself is often poor.
the organism soon after death. If the
sediment conditions remain favourable
(see pp.10–11), the organism may be
preserved as a fossil. In the case of
mummification, the arrest of decay
is only temporary; a mummified
organism will begin to decay as soon
as it is exposed to air once again.
Under exceptional circumstances,
soft-tissue details may be preserved.
Insects in amber and mammoths in ice
or tar are well-known examples. In both
Trapped in amber
Amber, the fossilized resin of a plant or tree, sometimes
preserves not only the external, but also the internal,
structure of an organism. Insects, spiders (above),
frogs, and lizards may be preserved in this way.
Silicification
This is a form of
“petrification”. Silicified
wood (left) can often be
found in both terrestrial
and freshwater deposits,
usually sands and silts.
Weathering volcanic
ash usually supplies
silica, which is gradually
incorporated into partially
decayed wood. Generally,
the cell structure of
silicified wood is quite
poorly preserved;
however, the presence of
iron and other minerals
can produce some really
spectacular colouring.
Introduction | 13
Phosphatization
Bones and teeth (above), which
normally dissolve on the sea bed
or leach from the sediment, are
more likely to be preserved if
large quantities of phosphates are Mummification
present. Phosphatic deposits are a The dry, sterile atmosphere of a cave
source of well-preserved fossils has preserved this moa foot (above)
and are often mined commercially. with some soft tissue intact; usually
bones are only preserved in a
fragile state. Mummification is
only a pause in disintegration
and is not true fossilization.
Freezing
Siberian mammoths are often
found preserved in permafrost.
Once thawed, they will decay
unless action is taken, but the
hair is relatively durable.
Limestone tomb
The completeness of this
fragile crinoid, entombed
in limestone (left), suggests
that the calcareous nodule
encasing it formed soon
after death.
Pyritization
The shell and chambers
of this ammonite (right)
were replaced by iron
pyrite. This is often
unstable in moist air,
so it needs to be stored
in very dry conditions.
14 | Introduction
als
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Bird Rep
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Chart key at
es
The symbols on the chart indicate the different groups of
plants and animals, both vertebrates and invertebrates,
some living, some long extinct. The blue radial lines
show their presumed relationships. The colour bands
represent the conventional geological periods, stretching
from the Ediacaran period (635 million years ago), to
the present (Recent) time.
Introduction | 15
Million
years ago
Pre-
Cambrian
aran
Ediac
550
brian
Cam
50 0
ap ods s n
Tetr ite vicia
tol Ordo
ap
Gr
tes
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Am
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Be
Tr 400
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D e vo
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Am
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Carb
30 0
ian
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Pe r m
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s ic
Tria s
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20 0
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Fern
Ginkgos
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Jura s
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Fern
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Br
Seed
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Conifers
on
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Cr e t a
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Sph
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Paleo
Fo
Angiosp
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Eo ce n
li g o ce n e
O
ene
Mioc
Pliocene
Pleistocene
Holocene
or Recent
Plants
16 | Introduction
WHERE TO LOOK
YOU CAN FIND FOSSILS in most places A visit to a local museum is often useful
where sedimentary rocks, such as clays, but up-to-date information from other
shales, and limestones, are exposed. collectors is better. Consider joining a
Exposures of hard rock recover very natural history society or a rock and
slowly from collecting and can be mineral club. They can often gain access
disappointing. Artificial exposures, like to private localities. Most geological
road cuts or quarries, can be much more societies have a code of conduct relating
productive. Exposures of softer rocks can to collecting, which it is advisable to
be good sites, provided they have not follow. Wherever you decide to collect
been too badly altered by metamorphosis. fossils, be aware of local regulations and
Inland sections in sands and clays tend obtain permission from the owner.
to degrade rapidly, become overgrown,
and lost. Here temporary exposures are
valuable, along with continually eroding
river or coastal sections.
Establishing the age of the rocks, with
the aid of a geological map, will give you
an idea of what sort of fossils to expect.
Most libraries have geological guides, but
remember that they may be out of date:
many an hour has been spent looking for
quarries that have been infilled and had
houses built on them.
Coastal sites
Wave-washed cliffs and foreshore
exposures (above) are good places to
search for fossils. Be aware of the state of
the tide when you are rounding headlands.
Wear a hard hat to protect you from small
stones dislodged by startled seabirds, but
remember it will not protect you from
larger falling rocks.
Quarries
Supervised parties are usually allowed
to collect fossils in quarries (left), but
individuals may be discouraged. Check
beforehand whether there are places,
usually around active faces, that are
out-of-bounds. Hard hats are a normal
requirement. The staff often know where
the best specimens may be found.
Introduction | 17
Trilobite
Concoryphe (left),
an eyeless deep-water
genus, was found
in a hard Cambrian
mudstone.
Arid terrains
Although erosion is slow
in deserts (below) and
badlands, the large areas
of exposure that exist can
more than compensate.
National parks
Hammering rocks is often discouraged in areas of
natural beauty and is illegal in most national parks
(above), so please be sensitive. In this way, fossils
will still be there for future generations.
Rugged terrain
Fossils are often concentrated along particular
bedding planes; the combination of a potentially
interesting area and well-stratified rocks make an
ideal hunting ground (below).
18 | Introduction
COLLECTING FOSSILS
COLLECTING FOSSILS is a very relaxing it as much as possible. Cover it with
and intellectually stimulating hobby, but layers of a separator (wet paper or
it is one that can often be frustrated by cling film), followed by layers of plaster
not having suitable field equipment. bandage. Once the plaster has been set,
It is clearly impossible to cater for all you can lift the fossil out of the rock
eventualities, but the tools shown below face, and then repeat the process on
form a basic selection that covers most the underside.
situations. However, it is always better to Your safety should be a primary
leave a fossil in the field than to try to dig concern. Hard hats, goggles, and gloves
it out in a hurry with the wrong tools; this are essential. Finally, before you set out on
could damage a valuable scientific find. an expedition, ask other collectors, who
Occasionally, equipment for plastering are familiar with the area you intend to
is required. You use this to protect fragile visit, exactly what tools you will need.
fossils before you remove them from
the rock. Clean the fossil and expose SAFETY EQUIPMENT
compass
Rocks can be sharp and dangerous. A hard
hat is essential if collecting near high rock faces.
Goggles will shield your eyes from dust and
stones, and gloves will protect your hands.
map
GPS
long tape measure
Map, GPS,
and compass
A geological map and a
compass will help you to find
fossil localities. Take a long tape
measure to record the level of
the bed in which you find fossils.
mallet
Field tools
For extracting fossils from hard rocks,
a sturdy mallet and several guarded
geological chisels are essential equipment. A
hammer pick-ended geological hammer is
useful on most types of rock. Soft
sediments are best tackled with
a trowel or a spade.
trowel hand
lens
Sieve
Use a sieve to separate
fossils from sands and
gravels. Usually one or
two different meshes
are needed to avoid
guarded losing small fossils.
chisels
Plastering
Protect fragile fossils in a plaster
jacket before removing them
from the rock. This prevents
them from shattering.
plastic
sieve
Spade
When you are searching for fossils in soft
sediments, such as sands, silts, and clays,
a narrow-bladed spade, rather than a
conventional geological hammer, is
the most useful tool for clearing an
area around the fossil.
20 | Introduction
dilute acid
sieve
engraving tool
sharks’ teeth
airpen
Organic acids
Sieving Use dilute organic acids,
Use a stack of stainless steel or brass e.g. vinegar, to remove
sieves to separate samples containing the surplus matrix from
small fossils, such as sharks’ teeth, into a calcareous specimen.
different sizes. Brass sieves are soft and Practice the procedure on an
damaged by sea water, and so are not unimportant fossil first, to avoid
suitable for use in the field. damaging a valuable specimen.
Introduction | 21
Indexing
Store your fossils in individual plastic organized
boxes or shallow cardboard trays. Label fossil
each specimen carefully. Keep a set of collection
plastic duplicate records in a card-file system
boxes
or on a computer or memory sticks;
include details of the preservatives,
glues, and hardeners used.
card-file
index
Microscope
A binocular microscope is useful
for sorting small fossils from a
sieved residue, or examining
memory sticks details of large specimens.
22 | Introduction
National museums
These often have an identification
service, and good regional and
national exhibits of fossils (left),
allowing collectors to make their
own determinations. Only the best
of a vast collection is on display,
so try not to be discouraged if
your fossils don’t quite match in
quality. The museum shop will
usually have a good selection of
books on fossil identification.
Local museums
Most museum curators are happy to give advice,
discuss the local geology, and help identify
problem specimens (right). Their knowledge and
enthusiasm has inspired many young collectors
to pursue geology as a career. Local museums
can also put you in touch with the nearest
geological society.
Easy find
Shark’s teeth are a
favourite among fossil
collectors. In rocks of
the right age, they are
quite easy to find.
Introduction | 23
Eryops megalocephalus
Cope
INVERTEBRATES
FORAMINIFERANS WORMS
Tubes of
Proliserpula
Test of Tubes of
Page: 32 Nummulites Pages: 40–41 Rotularia
GRAPTOLITES
Pages: 45–49
Skeleton of Skeleton of
Didymograptus Phyllograptus
CORALS
ARTHROPODS
Arthropods have segmented bodies with a locomotory, sensory, or feeding elements. Moulting
differentiated anterior end. The body is covered by is a common feature of arthropods – otherwise
a cuticle, or shell, that acts as an external skeleton their growth would be constrained by the external
(exoskeleton). The exoskeleton is sometimes cuticle. Arthropods include the Trilobites, the
strengthened by calcium carbonate or calcium Crustacea (crabs, lobsters, barnacles, and shrimps),
phosphate. Arthropods have a variable number the Chelicerates (king crabs, scorpions, and spiders),
of appendages (legs), which are specialized into and the Uniramia (millipedes and the Insects).
TRILOBITES CHELICERATES
CRUSTACEANS INSECTS
Imprint of
Exoskeleton
Hymenocaris
of Hydrophilus
Pages: 66–72 Pages: 76–78
Exoskeleton of Archaeogeryon Imprint of Petalura
BRACHIOPODS
MOLLUSCS
Molluscs are a very diverse group that includes the families of bivalve and gastropod have entered
chitons, scaphopods, bivalves, gastropods, and fresh water. Some gastropods have become air
cephalopods. Nearly all molluscs have calcium- breathing and colonized the land. They can be
carbonate shells; only a few genera of gastropods, filter feeders (most bivalves), herbivores (some
cephalopods, and nudibranchs lack this. The soft gastropods), carnivores (gastropods, cephalopods).
body is rarely preserved, so molluscs are classified One major group, the ammonoids, became extinct
by their shell structure. Most are marine; only a few at the end of the Cretaceous.
BIVALVES
Page: 114
Shell of Shell of Shell of
Dentalium Turritella Ecphora
NAUTILOIDS
ECHINODERMS
The echinoderms include the echinoids (sea All are restricted to fully marine environments and
urchins), holothuroids (sea cucumbers), asteroids thus act as marine indicators. Most possess solid
(starfish), crinoids (sea lilies), as well as the extinct calcite skeletons that fall apart on death; crinoidal
blastoids, cystoids, and carpoids. All have five-rayed debris can be so abundant as to be rock forming
symmetry except for some echinoids and carpoids. (see p.168). Some irregular echinoids (see Micraster
They possess a complex water vascular system that p.185) have evolved in a manner that makes it
operates a network of multi-functional tube feet. possible for them to be used as zone fossils.
CRINOIDS
ECHINOIDS ASTEROIDS
The shell or test is composed of thin, loosely These are five-sided, with margins edged with solid
cemented, calcite plates. The test may be calcitic blocks (ossicles). Occasionally preserved as
sub-spherical and have five-rayed symmetry, or whole, articulated specimens; more usually found
heart-shaped, or dorso-ventrally flattened with as isolated ossicles.
a bilateral symmetry (characterized by irregular Range Ordovician–Recent
echinoids). Plates bear spines that may be short
and bristle-like or large and club-shaped. Pages: Cast of
Range Ordovician–Recent 186–188 Tropidaster
Test of
Hemicidaris
OPHIUROIDS
Usually intact, compact calyx. Short stem, calyx of many Stem short, asymmetrical
Range Ordovician–Permian small, irregular plates. calyx of small polygonal
Range Cambrian– plates, no arms.
Page: 190 Permian Range Cambrian–
Devonian
Pages: 191–192
Page: 193
Calyx and
Calyx of stem of Calyx of
Pentremites Lepadocrinites Cothurnocystis
Identification key | 29
VERTEBRATES
A vertebrate is an animal possessing a flexible amphibians, reptiles, mammals, and birds. The
segmented spinal column composed of cartilage oldest known fossil vertebrate is from the early
or bone. The principle vertebrate groups are fish, Cambrian period.
FISH
Fish are a very diverse group of marine and and pharyngeal perforations (usually known
freshwater vertebrates. All fish possess as gills). They all have paired pelvic and
segmented body musculature, a brain, spinal pectoral fins, unpaired dorsal and anal fins,
cord, notochord, terminal mouth, hollow gut, and a post-anal tail.
AGNATHANS
Pages: 194–195
GNATHOSTOMES
Gnathostomes are vertebrates that possess a cranium with a hinged lower jaw.
PLACODERMS ACANTHODIANS
CHONDRICHTHYANS OSTEICHTHYANS
TETRAPODS
AMNIOTES
Amniotes are tetrapod vertebrates that include synapsids, mammals, reptiles, dinosaurs, and birds. They
lack the larval stage of lissamphibians and have an amniotic membrane protecting the embryo.
REPTILES
Diverse grouping of
tetrapod. Skulls with or
DINOSAURS
without secondary
openings. Limb bones are Bones are solid, or thick-walled BIRDS
usually hollow (except and hollow. Skull is lightly built
turtles). Teeth are enamelled with fixed quadrate bones;
Skull is light, teeth are
with a single long root, set in enamelled teeth lie in deep
usually absent. Limb
sockets or fixed to jaws. sockets. Hip socket
bones are hollow and
Range Late Carboniferous– is perforated;
thin-walled,
Recent head of thigh
sternum is
bone is angled
keeled, ankle
inwards.
bones are fused.
Range Late
Range Late
Triassic–
Jurassic–Recent
Cretaceous
Limb bone of
Tooth of Jobaria Aepyornis
Carapace of Trionyx
Pages: 256–259
Pages: 245–255
Pages: 225–244
SYNAPSIDS
Bones are solid, vertebrae MAMMALS
biconcave, neural canal is present.
Skull is often massive. Teeth differ.
Limb bones are usually hollow and
Range Late Carboniferous– Jurassic
thin-walled; epiphyseal plates present.
Teeth are enamel-covered, and
multi-faceted, some have bony roots.
Range Late Triassic–Recent
Tooth of
Skull roof of Tetralophodon
Bison
Skull of Cynognathus
Pages: 263–285
Pages: 260–262
Identification key | 31
ALGAE PLANTS
Pages:
289–290
Colony of
Mastopora Thallus of Frond of
Hexagonocaulon Asterophyllites
The fronds of ferns and pteridosperms are Foliage grows from large trunk.
divided into multiple leaflets. In lycopods, the Cones are in centre of
leaves are spirally arranged. Spores are borne on crown or leaf bases;
the underside of leaves in ferns; in cones in the flowers are present.
leaf axil in lycopods. Pteridosperm fronds bear a Range Triassic– Recent
single seed.
Range Late Silurian–Recent Page: 300
Flower of
Cone of
Williamsonia
Equisitites
INVERTEBRATES
FORAMINIFERANS
FORAMINIFERANS ARE SMALL, single foraminiferans float in the surface
celled organisms belonging to the waters of the oceans, their dead tests
kingdom Protista. Some species secrete drifting down to the sea bed; benthonic
a shell, called a test, made of calcium foraminiferans live in or on the sea
carbonate or (less commonly) chitin. bottom. Both types occur in large
Others construct a test by sticking numbers, and rocks may form from
together particles of sand and debris. their remains. The few large species
Most species live in the sea: planktonic live in warm, shallow waters.
Alveolina Block of
Alveolina
elliptica
Oval in shape and often large in size, Alveolina
(Sowerby);
this creature is made up internally of limestone
numerous small chambers, which in Kithar Series;
life may have housed symbiotic algae. Eocene; India.
SPONGES
SPONGES ARE SIMPLE, sedentary, aquatic siliceous, or horny. Sponges occur
animals. Water passes in through their as fossils from Cambrian times
many surface pores to the central cavity onwards, and were abundant in
of the sac-like body, and out through the Cretaceous. Stromatoporoids
larger holes. The skeleton, where are also believed to be sponges, but
present, is made up of needle-like archaeocyathids are now thought
spicules, and is either calcareous, to be an independent phylum.
Hydnoceras vase-shaped
body
The thin-walled, vase-shaped Hydnoceras is a fine
example of a glass sponge, with an open structure of
spicules forming a rectangular meshwork. Bulbous
swellings appear along the longitudinal ridges.
HABITAT Living glass sponges are found only in deep
water, but they were once common at all depths.
REMARK This fossil is an internal mould in sandstone,
preserving the filling of the skeleton but not the
skeleton itself. The meshwork is clearly visible, but
not the spicules themselves.
rectangular
bulbous swelling meshwork
Hydnoceras tuberosum
base
Typical height
Conrad; Upper
20cm (8in) Devonian; USA.
Rhizopoterion top
Rhizopoterion cribrosum
This generally funnel-shaped genus (Phillips); Upper Chalk;
is one of the glass sponges, or Late Cretaceous; UK.
hexactinellids, which are very different
in their organization from other sponges
found as fossils. Their siliceous skeletons
have an open structure of spicules, with four
to six rays mutually at right-angles, forming
a rectangular meshwork. Within the glass
sponges, ventriculitids form an important
group, of which Rhizopoterion is a member. side
wall
They vary in form, but all are characterized by
the form of their spicules, and by having walls
pierced by an irregular array of slot-like inhalant
and exhalant canals. Their bases have a holdfast
of radiating “roots”, and they range in shape from
tall, narrow vases to flat, open mushrooms.
HABITAT Glass sponges, such as
Rhizopoterion lived on muddy substrates rectangular
exhalant
down to a depth of 6,000m (20,000ft)
canals
or more.
REMARK As indicated by its usual
(but incorrect) name, Ventriculites
open meshwork
infundibuliformis, this species is generally
of spicules
funnel-shaped. It occurs commonly in
the Late Cretaceous (Chalk) of Europe. Typical height
10cm (4in)
Raphidonema Raphidonema
farringdonense
This genus belongs to the separate class of (Sharpe);
calcisponges, in which the skeleton is made Faringdon Sponge
of calcareous, rather than siliceous, Gravels; Early
spicules. Raphidonema is irregularly Cretaceous; UK.
cup-shaped and very variable in size.
Generally, the interior is smooth,
while outside it is covered with
rounded, knobbly projections.
main exhalant
HABITAT This calcareous sponge opening
lived in warm, shallow waters.
REMARK This is the most
common sponge found in the
famous Faringdon Sponge
Gravels at Faringdon, knobbly side wall
Oxfordshire, in the Typical height outside
United Kingdom. 8cm (31 ⁄4in) surface
Actinostroma concentric
growth layers
Actinostroma is a typical calcareous, reef
building, blob-like stromatoporoid.
Although enigmatic, the genus is
thought by some to be the ancestor
of modern sclerosponges. When
studied in thin section, it shows
a fine structure of thin,
concentric layers and
radial pillars.
HABITAT This genus commonly
lived on, and formed, reefs.
REMARK These organisms were
important rock formers,
particularly in the Silurian
and Devonian.
Actinostroma
clathratum
Typical height Nicholson; Middle irregular shape
12cm (43 ⁄4in) Devonian; UK.
BRYOZOANS
BRYOZOANS ARE colonial animals shape – some are sheet-like encrustations
which resemble miniature corals but on shells and stones, whereas others
are more closely related to brachiopods. grow as small tree shapes or net-like
They range from the Ordovician to the fronds. Each colony consists of a few to
present day. Most bryozoans live on thousands of connected individuals
the sea bed and secrete calcareous (zooids). Each zooid has a tubular or
skeletons. Bryozoan colonies vary in box-shaped skeleton.
Fenestella
branches linked
by dissepiments
Ceriocava cylindrical
branches
soft
matrix
This is a bushy colony with bifurcating
cylindrical branches up to 5.5cm (2in) in
diameter. The branch surfaces are covered
by a honeycomb of polygonal (typically
hexagonal) zooidal apertures, many
sealed by lids. Long, sack-shaped
polymorphic zooids for larval
brooding are occasionally found.
HABITAT This bryozoan formed low
colonies on the sea floor, filtering
food from the surrounding water.
Ceriocava
corymbosa
Lamouroux; Bryozoan
limestone; Middle fractured
Typical branch end of
diameter 3mm (1 ⁄ 8in)
Jurassic; France. branch
Reptoclausa ridges on
colony surface
sediment trapped
between ridges
This encrusting colony is characterized by having long
ridges aligned parallel to the direction of its growth.
Ridge flanks and crests are occupied by feeding
zooids with sub-circular apertures. Smaller,
indistinct, non-feeding, polymorphic zooids
form the smooth-surfaced valleys between
the ridges. These zooids lack apertures.
HABITAT These colonies were relatively
robust, and capable of living on rolling
stones and shells in turbulent
marine conditions.
sheet-like colony
spreading over pebble
Reptoclausa hagenowi
Typical colony (Sharpe); Faringdon Sponge exposed surface
diameter 4cm (11 ⁄ 2in) Gravel; Early Cretaceous; UK. of dark grey pebble
Schizoretepora
zooids opening on
corrugated fronds branch surface
Schizoretepora
notopachys
(Busk); Coralline
Crag; Pliocene; UK.
branch
fragments
Hippoporidra
monticule
gastropod shell
completely
The thick, multilayered colonies encrust gastropod enveloped
shells. The feeding zooids have frontal walls pierced
by marginal pores, and apertures with a sinus. apex
Atop the monticules are larger zooids, and
scattered between the monticules are avicularia
with pointed rostra.
HABITAT Recent Hippoporidra live symbiotically
with hermit crabs, providing the crabs with
excellently camouflaged homes. Although
the crabs are not preserved larger
zooids on
as fossils, palaeontologists hermit crab
monticule
believe the bryozoan aperture
colonyform is diagnostic
Hippoporidra edax
of their past presence.
(Busk); James River
Formation;
Pleistocene; USA.
Typical length
2cm (3 ⁄4in) outer lip
WORMS
WORM IS A GENERAL NAME applied to some members of the polychaeta
representatives of various soft-bodied group of segmented worms secrete
invertebrate groups. They include the a dwelling tube made of durable
platyhelminthes, nematodes, nemertines, calcite, which is often found attached
acanthocephalans, annelids, and some to fossil shells or pebbles. These are
hemichordates. Most are unknown or common fossils in certain Mesozoic
very rare in the fossil record. However, and Cenozoic rocks.
Proliserpula ampullacea
Proliserpula (J. Sowerby); Upper Chalk;
The tube of this worm is always attached to a hard Late Cretaceous; UK.
substrate, often a fossil shell like the sea urchin
shown here. It coils in an irregular spiral, with
a single narrow ridge running along the
mid-line. The aperture is circular, and tube
the sides display prominent growth lines.
Typical diameter
1.5cm (5 ⁄ 8in) concave face convex face
Serpula
The tube of this serpulid worm is elongated and rounded in Serpula indistincta (Fleming);
cross-section, tapering slowly to a fine point. It may be gently Carboniferous Limestone;
curved or sharply bent, with a relatively thin wall, ornamented Early Carboniferous; UK.
by irregular growth lines. It has a rounded aperture.
HABITAT Although this genus
was not cemented to the substrate,
it was not actually mobile.
limestone
matrix
narrow part of
tube, formed
first
rounded
aperture
growth
Typical length lines
5cm (2in)
TRACE FOSSILS
TRACE FOSSILS ARE the remains of by their constructor. Ichnogenera and
structures made by animals, preserved ichnospecies, from the Greek word
in sedimentary rock. They include ichnos (trace), are the usual classifications,
tracks, trails, borings, and burrows. but fossils may also be classified by
Since different organisms are able to their cause, i.e. feeding, crawling,
make the same trace, trace fossils are dwelling, etc., and hence fodinichnia,
classified by their shape, rather than repichnia, dominichnia.
Cruziana sandstone
preservation
infill of double
groove
This trace has a two-lobed structure with
a central groove – the hardened infill of a
double groove excavated on the sea floor.
The lobes are covered with scratch marks
made by the legs of the excavating
organism, usually a trilobite.
Cruziana sp.;
Nubian sandstone;
Variable length Cambrian; Egypt. scratch mark made by leg
PROBLEMATICA
SOME FOSSILS CANNOT be placed have been variously classified as
into major groups of animals or plants worms, soft corals, jellyfish, etc.
with any certainty. Often this is because However, the true identity of these
they represent only a small, obscure part ancient fossils remains a subject of
of an organism, but there are others, controversy – some may even be
from Ediacaran sediments, that have trace fossils – and they are best
completely preserved forms. These treated as Problematica.
Charniodiscus
Charniodiscus central axis
masoni (Ford);
This is a feather-shaped fossil attached to a basal Woodhouse Beds;
disc (not present on this specimen). Closely spaced Ediacaran; UK.
alternate branches diverge from a central axis,
with each branch subdivided by about
15 transverse grooves.
HABITAT This animal lived attached to
the sea floor, feeding by filtering nutritious side
particles from the water. branches
REMARK The affinities of Charniodiscus
remain uncertain, but most palaeontologists
consider it to be a type of soft coral. One transverse
theory suggests it is a representative of a grooves Typical length
distinct group of organisms, the Vendozoa. 20cm (8in)
Spriggina
The body of Spriggina is elongated, tapering to a point at the rear,
similar to a tail. The broader front end is rounded, and consists of a Spriggina floundersi
narrow, crescent-shaped arc. The rest of the body is divided along Glaessner; Ediacara
its length by a central line, and transversely into short, broadly Sandstone; Ediacaran;
V-shaped segments. Australia.
HABITAT Spriggina lived in a shallow,
sandy, marine habitat.
REMARK This form was first thought
to be a worm, then an early pointed
“tail” end
arthropod or part of a
new group, neither
plant nor animal.
crescent-
V-shaped
shaped
segments
“head”
Typical length
7cm (23 ⁄4in)
Paraconularia
Paraconularia derwentensis
This shell is conical and four-sided, but rhombic (Johnston); Early
in cross-section. Each of the four sides carries Permian; Australia.
upwardly arched, closely spaced growth lines, and
tentacled
at each of the four corners is a shallow V-shaped
end in the
groove. The shell itself is thin, and made of living
phosphatic and proteinaceous material. animal
broken
Typical length base
10cm (4in)
GRAPTOLITES
GRAPTOLITES ARE AN extinct group or more branches (stipes), originating
of colonial organisms that lived from from an individual (sicula). Each
the Cambrian to the Carboniferous. subsequent individual was housed
Their remains can be mistaken for fossil within a tubular structure (theca).
plants as they sometimes resemble Geologists find graptolites especially
fossilized twigs. Each colony had one useful in dating rocks.
reduced
Retiolites skeleton base of colony
Phyllograptus typus
Phyllograptus Hall; Levis shale; Early
This colony comprised four series of thecae Ordovician; Canada.
arranged back-to-back in a cross-like
formation. Usually, due to compression,
only a pair of thecae are clearly visible
on shale specimens. The thecae
are long and curved with small
apertural lips. The generic
name, Phyllograptus, refers
to the leaf-like appearance
of these flattened colonies.
HABITAT Phyllograptus floated
freely in the open ocean.
Typical length
3.5cm (12 ⁄ 5in) shale matrix
Expansograptus
These were small to large
graptolites with approximately two
twenty to several hundred thecae. extended
Two stipes diverge from the initial stipes
sicula, which is distinguished by
its dorsally projecting nema (an
extension of the initial sicula) at
the point where the thecae of the
two stipes diverge. The thecae are
usually of relatively simple type,
tubular or with a small apertural
lip. The different species are
distinguished by the number of
thecae per centimetre, and the
width and shape of the stipes.
HABITAT Expansograptus
floated in open seas.
Expansograptus cf. nitidus
(Hall); Mytton Formation;
Early Ordovician; UK.
sicula
Loganograptus
These were large graptolites: the rapid initial
dichotomies near the sicula produced a colony
with sixteen stipes. These stipes were
evenly separated in life,
but frequently bent in
fossils. The thecae are
simple tubes – about
one per millimetre.
HABITAT This genus
lived in the deeper
parts of the
Ordovician ocean.
Loganograptus
logani (Hall); Skiddaw
Group; Early thecae slowly increase Typical length
Ordovician; UK. in size along stipes 20cm (8in)
Tetragraptus
quadribrachiatus
(Hall); Skiddaw Group;
Early Ordovician; UK.
Typical length
l0cm (4in)
Orthograptus mudstone
carbonized
periderm
Orthograptus was a biserial graptolite,
which means that it had two series of thecae
lying back-to-back, producing a robust,
double-edged colony. The proximal growth
of the colony is a crucial identification
feature. Orthograptus had a strongly
developed spine. The thecal apertures
were moderately straight. The variations
in colony size, width, and thecal form
determine the species.
HABITAT This graptolite is robust
possibly epiplanktonic, and colony
floated in very shallow seas.
Orthograptus
intermedius (Elles);
Typical length Bifidus Beds; Early
8cm (3in) Ordovician; UK.
Monograptus
convolutus
Hisinger; Silurian
Flags; Silurian; UK.
Typical diameter
20cm (8in)
Didymograptus siculae at
pointed ends
These graptolites formed a shape similar
to a “tuning fork”. The colonies were
often robust, ranging in size from
1cm to 10cm (3⁄8in to 4in). The
thecae are long with simple
tubes. The stipes expand in
width from the proximal end.
HABITAT This genus
floated in northern oceans.
Didymograptus
murchisoni
(Beck); Llanvirn
Series; Early
Ordovician; UK.
dark
shale
mineralized
Typical length periderm
10cm (4in)
Rhabdinopora
triangulate thecae
Rhabdinopora
socialis (Salter);
Typical length fan-like Dictyonemaskiffern;
6cm (21 ⁄ 2in) colonies Early Ordovician; Norway.
Rastrites magnus
Rastrites curved
stipe
(Mattock); Deep-water
The colony was thin and delicate shales; Silurian; UK.
with comparatively few thecae.
It had a single, elegantly
curved stipe. The thecae
were developed as long,
isolated, and narrow tubes
with a restricted aperture.
Such species could not
survive turbulence.
HABITAT Rastrites lived
in open oceans. They
are characteristic of
black shales.
black
shale
Typical length
4cm (11 ⁄ 2in) long thecae
CORALS
CORALS ARE MARINE ANIMALS with a tube-like features (corallites), often divided
sac-like body (polyp), mouth, tentacles, by simple transverse partitions (tabulae)
and skeleton. The polyp occupies a or by series of plates (dissepiments), or
circular, polygonal, or elongate cavity both. Polyps may divide to form colonies,
(calice), which is generally surrounded by with corallites sometimes joined by
a wall. Calices are usually divided by intercorallite structures (coenosteum).
star-like arrangements of plates (septa), There are three main coral groups,
which sometimes have a central structure. two extinct (Rugosa, Tabulata), and
The calice wall, if present, forms horn- or one extant (Scleractinia).
Goniophyllum angular
corallite
This coral is usually solitary. It has a square
to quadrilateral transverse section and a
lid-like structure of four plates (sometimes
missing). The calice is deep and the short
septa bear distinctive flanges. There are short septa
numerous internal dissepimental plates.
HABITAT Goniophyllum
lived in shallow-water
limestones and muds. Goniophyllum
Typical calice diameter pyramidale Hisinger;
1.5cm (5 ⁄ 8in) Silurian; Sweden.
Heliophyllum sp.;
Heliophyllum horn-shaped
Hamilton Formation;
A solitary, sometimes colonial, coral, with open branched Middle Devonian;
corallite
or adjoined corallites. The calice is shallow with long Canada.
septa, sometimes reaching the centre of the corallite.
rejuvenating
Dissepiments are numerous, small, well-rounded, and calice
confined to the outer zone of corallite. The central
zone is occupied by flat or slightly curved tabulae.
The external walls are thin with fine growth ridges.
fine growth
ridges
Typical calice
diameter 2cm (3 ⁄4in)
transverse
sections of
corallites
fine
Typical calice diameter limestone
2.5cm (1in) matrix
Favosites
sp.; Wenlock concave
Typical calice Limestone; Late calices
diameter 2mm (1 ⁄ 16in) Silurian; UK.
Actinocyathus Polished
This colonial coral has flattened to rounded cross-section
colonies of closely adjoined polygonal corallites
of different sizes in a coarsely honeycomb-like
pattern. The calices are concave with a central
boss. The septa are thin, often alternating long
and short. The axial boss is complex, consisting
of a steeply sloping series of small blistery plates
arranged in conical form around a small central
plate and also intersected by septal plates. The
dissepiments are in series, forming a wide outer
zone within the corallites, distinctively very
large and irregular. In transverse section, the
septa appear to be largely absent from
the dissepimental zone, but actually form
fine ridges running across upper surfaces
of dissepiments. The tabulae are flat or
concave. The corallites have thin external
walls with fine growth ridges, but these are
only visible in well-preserved specimens
when broken along the corallite junctions.
HABITAT Actinocyathus lived in shallow-water
limestones and mud.
REMARK The name Actinocyathus is
now used for forms previously called
Lonsdaleia with closely adjoined variably sized
corallites. Lonsdaleia is still used polygonal calices inner wall
for openly branched forms.
concave calices
outer
septal
Actinocyathus
ridges crassiconus (McCoy);
Carboniferous
limestone; Early
Carboniferous; UK.
Typical calice
diameter 6mm (1 ⁄4in)
Halysites corallites
This colonial coral has its corallites
arranged in single series in “pan-pipe” Colony
formation, with a minute tube between
from above
each corallite. In transverse section
they appear chain-like. The chains
are straight to curved, dividing and
rejoining each other, enclosing
cell-like spaces between them. The
individual corallites are rounded to
elliptical. Septa are absent, or present
as a few inconspicuous spines. The
walls are thick, the tabulae are
numerous, mostly flat and horizontal.
HABITAT Halysites inhabited warm,
shallow waters including reefs.
Halysites catenularius
(Linnaeus); Niagara
group; Silurian; USA.
sediment in spaces
Typical calice diameter between chains
2mm (1 ⁄ 16in)
Thecosmilia rejuvenating
corallite sediment
Thecosmilia is a colonial coral with branches between
corallites
separate from each other. It has one, occasionally
two, large, corallite centres to each branch. The
colonies are bushy with corallites radiating
outwards, often becoming more or less
parallel. The calices are deeply concave.
The septa are numerous, variable in size
in transverse view, with successively
shorter septa. The outsides of the
branches bear toothed longitudinal
ridges which are continuous
with the septa.
HABITAT Thecosmilia inhabited
warm, shallow waters and reefs.
Colpophyllia
stellata (Catullo);
Castelgomberto
Typical calice Limestone; Late meandering,
diameter 1cm (3 ⁄ 8in) Oligocene; Italy. calicinal “valleys”
TRILOBITES
ALTHOUGH THEY ARE now extinct, these also divided into a head shield (cephalon),
arthropods flourished in the sea, from the a thorax of up to 30 segments, and a tail
Cambrian through to the Permian. They shield (pygidium). The axial region of the
ranged in length from one millimetre head shield (glabella) had cheeks on
to one metre (1 ⁄ 25in–39in). The name, either side, and often well-developed
trilobite, derives from their division into eyes. Each segment of the thorax had
three longitudinal lobes: a slightly raised limbs, but these are rarely preserved.
central lobe (the axis), with two flatter Trilobites could roll up (enroll) their
pleural lobes on either side. They were ex ternal skeletons, probably for defence.
Acadagnostus cephalon
glabella
This was a small, blind trilobite,
with only two thoracic segments,
but it was still able to roll
up tightly. It has a furrow tail shield
dividing the area in front
of the glabella, and a similar
furrow behind the axis of Acadagnostus
the tail shield. The head exaratus
and tail are the same size. (GrÖnwall);
HABITAT This genus lived
Menevian
in deep water. Typical length Series; Middle
8mm (1 ⁄ 3in) Cambrian; UK.
Olenellus
long, crescent-
shaped eyes
Acadoparadoxides wide,
inflated
This trilobite was larger than any other glabella
genal
spines
Acadoparadoxides
long
briareus (Geyer); Middle thorax
Typical length Cambrian; Morocco.
20cm (8in) small tail shield
thorax with
short spines
moderately
Typical length
large tail shield
6cm (21 ⁄ 2in)
Ktenoura
retrospinosa
tail shield
Typical length with long spines Lane; Wenlock
5cm (2in) Series; Silurian; UK.
Sphaerexochus
The external skeleton of this glabella
trilobite is convex and elongate,
with a thick, calcite cuticle. Its swollen
raised central lobe is especially glabellar
convex, and the inflated glabella lobes
occupies the bulk of the head width.
The genal spines are reduced. Its
thorax has 11 segments, with spiny
pleural tips, curved downwards.
The short tail shield is also spiny. thorax
HABITAT
Sphaerexochus probably
lived in fairly shallow small tail
shield
water, on and around
coral reefs.
REMARK This genus Sphaerexochus
is usually found in mirus Beyrich;
Late Ordovician Wenlock
and Silurian limestones. Limestone;
Typical length
3cm (11 ⁄4in) Silurian; UK.
long spinose
Selenopeltis wide glabella tips
Selenopeltis buchi
(Barrande); Late
Ordovician; Morocco.
short pygidium
Typical length with few segments
14cm (51 ⁄ 2in)
Enrolled
Eldredgeops large eye specimen
This trilobite has a convex glabella that expands
forwards. The large eyes have fewer lenses than
usual, which may have improved optics. The
thorax has 12 segments, equipped with facets
which facilitate enrollment. The deeply
furrowed tail shield is smaller than its head.
A sculpture of tubercles ornaments
the thick cuticle.
HABITAT Eldredgeops
inhabited shallow
water in warm seas.
tuberculate head
Calymene
blumenbachii
(Brongniart); Wenlock
Limestone; Silurian; UK. thoracic
pleurae
Typical length Enrolled pygidium
7cm (23 ⁄4in) specimen tucked in
Leonaspis downturned
head shield
Leonaspis has a wide head, drawn out to the
side and rear into exceptionally stout genal
spines, and with small, slightly elevated
eyes. The ten thoracic segments have
wide pleurae, extended into robust
spines, and straight pleural furrows.
The tail shield is also very spiny.
HABITAT A bottom-dweller, this
genus used its spines for protection.
REMARK This type of trilobite had
a long stratigraphic range.
very stout
pleural spines
paired tail-
shield spines
Leonaspis coronata
Typical length (Salter); Wenlock
1.5cm (5 ⁄ 8in) Limestone; Silurian; UK.
limestone
Encrinurus thoracic
variolaris Brogniart; segment
Flexicalymene
The head shield is convex with a prominent glabella and
small eyes. The thoracic segments are downturned and the Flexicalymene ouzregui
pygidium is small, similar to that in Calymene. These features (Destombes); Late
assist it in enrolling, a likely defensive strategy. Ordovician; Morocco.
HABITAT Flexicalymene was an small large
inhabitant of warm shelf seas. eye glabella
REMARK This is a common
genus, usually preserved
as internal and external
moulds in limonitic
mudstone nodules.
thoracic
segments
Elrathia kingii
(Meek); Wheeler relatively small
Shale; Middle tail shield
Typical length Cambrian, USA.
2cm (3 ⁄4in)
Asaphus punctatus
(Lessnikova); Middle
Ordovician; Russia.
Ogygopsis short
The exoskeleton of this genus is broadly oval genal
spines
and gently convex, with the axis tapering
along its whole length. The near-rectangular
glabella extends close to the head margin,
with moderately sized eyes in a central
position, and triangular cheeks. The thorax
is made up of eight segments, with deep
furrows in the pleurae. The tail shield is
exceptionally large and the pleural fields
in the tail are strongly furrowed.
short, spiny
pleural tips
large tail
Ogygopsis klotzi shield with
Walcott; Burgess long axis
Shale, Stephen
Typical length Formation; Middle axis close
8cm (31 ⁄4in) Cambrian; Canada. to margin
thoracic
segments
Odontochile
hausemann
(Brongniart); Late
Devonian; Morocco.
large
Typical length
tail spine pygidium
8cm (31 ⁄4in)
CRUSTACEANS
CRUSTACEANS ARE mainly aquatic, two pairs of tactile antennae, and
carnivorous arthropods, whose body three pairs of limbs with food-handling
and legs are enclosed by a supporting abilities. The walking legs are divided
chitinous shell. The body is divisible in two, and may have gills for breathing.
into head, thorax, and abdomen, but The last abdominal appendage may
head and thorax may fuse together become flattened, to form a tail fan
into a cephalothorax. The head has with the end spine.
Hymenocaris Hymenocaris
The near-oval, smooth, bivalved shell vermicauda
of Hymenocaris encloses but does not Salter; Tremadoc
coalesce with the thorax. The thorax Series; Late
has eight segments (somites), each Cambrian; UK.
bearing a pair of flattened appendages.
The abdomen comprises seven somites,
and a tail spine (telson) with three pairs
of spines – the middle being the longest,
abdominal
the outer very divergent. segments
operculum with
Concavus four plates
symmetrical
This barnacle, shaped like a truncated cone, is made up compartmental
of six calcareous plates on a solid base. The plates are plates
hollow-walled, but the radii are solid. The operculum,
which can be closed by four valves, is the opening
through which six pairs of legs (cirri) pass to collect
food suspended in water.
HABITAT Barnacles live on rocky
shores and floating objects worldwide.
Concavus concavus
base cemented
Typical length (Bronn); Coralline to substrate
1cm (3 ⁄ 8in) Crag; Pliocene; UK.
Palaeocarpilius
The dorsal carapace of Palaeocarpilius
is egg-like in outline, with a slightly
extended front, strongly arched
transversely, and more steeply
rounded longitudinally. The
front and side margins are spiny
and the claws are robust, with
the right one larger. The legs are
long and stout. On the ventral strong right claw frontal margin smaller claw
surface, the front curves with orbits
downwards and backwards
to meet the head of the
narrow plate in front of
the mouth.
abdomen
HABITAT The genus was with bases
largely tropical, living near of legs
the shore.
Palaeocarpilius
aquilinus Collins
& Morris; Wadi
Thamit Group;
Typical length Middle Eocene;
6cm (21 ⁄ 2in) Libya.
Stramentum Stramentum
pulchellum
Like most cirripedes, the stalked Stramentum (G.B. Sowerby);
remained attached as an adult. It is divided Middle Chalk;
into a capitulum, which contains the body, the Late Cretaceous;
mouth parts, and thoracic appendages, and a UK.
peduncle or stalk, which contains the gonads.
The capitulum is protected by ten calcareous plates
enclosing body
plates. The peduncle is also protected by
calcareous plates, but in eight regularly
overlapping columns. Each column is
surmounted by a plate in the capitulum.
HABITAT These animals frequently plates
lived attached to the empty shells of protecting
ammonites, bivalves, or gastropods flexible stalk
lying on the sea floor.
REMARK It was once believed that point of
these fossils grew into geese. attachment
Typical length
2cm (3 ⁄4in)
Cyclosphaeroma External
mould
This creature has a broad body, arched
transversely, with a small trilobed head
and large eyes near the side margin.
Its thorax is composed of eight
segments, each with a single-
branched appendage. Five
abdominal segments are fused
as an enlarged triangular tail
spine (pleotelson), longitudinally
bisected by a median ridge.
There are notches on each
side of the pleotelson for the
insertion of rear abdominal
thoracic
appendages (uropods). segments
HABITAT An
triangular
omnivorous scavenger pleotelson
and occasionally a
predator, Cyclosphaeroma Internal cast
lived at intertidal to
moderate depths. Cyclosphaeroma woodwardi
Typical length van Straelen; Purbeck
5mm (1 ⁄ 5in) Beds; Late Jurassic; UK.
Eryon
flattened carapace
walking legs
The carapace is hexagonal and with claws
compressed, with sharp side
margins. The front is
truncated, with spiny margins
at the side, and stalked,
well-developed compound
eyes. The first to fourth
thoracic appendages have
claws (chelae); the fifth is
sub-chelate. The abdomen is
long, flat, and narrow, with a claw
ridge down the middle. It ends
in a telson which, with the
uropods, forms a tailfan. wide, flat
segments
HABITAT Eryon lived in
quiet, clear-water marine telson and
lagoons or in shallow uropods
water near to the
coastline. Today, the Eryon arctiformis
family is found only in (Schlotheim); Solnhofen
the ocean depths. Typical length Limestone; Late Jurassic;
12cm (43 ⁄4in) Germany.
long antennule
Tealliocaris woodwardi
(Etheridge); Oil
Typical length Shale Series; Early
5cm (2in) Carboniferous; UK.
Acanthochirana abdominal
segment
cylindrical
carapace
This shrimp has a short, smooth
cylindrical carapace and a toothed
rostrum. The antennae are longer
than the body. The first pair of
thoracic appendages are short
and articulated. The third pair
are the longest. The abdominal
segments overlap each other and
the tail spine is spindle-shaped.
HABITAT This is a fully
marine genus, although
some members of
the family Penaeidae
appear to have lived
in brackish and
fresh water. tailfan Acanthochirana
cenomanica Glaessner;
Typical length Late Cretaceous; Lebanon.
3.5cm (12 ⁄ 5in)
Ventral view
Thalassina
sauamifera
De Man; Pleistocene;
Australia. Typical length 12cm (43 ⁄4in)
Linuparus
Closely related to the langouste, Linuparus Side view
has a carapace compressed from top
to bottom, without a rostrum,
but with three longitudinal
ridges. It has spines, also
compressed, above the
eye sockets and close to
the midline. The base
of the antenna is fused to the
epistome and the side margin.
There are no claws on the first four walking leg abdominal segments
legs, and the fifth leg has a claw only bases turned under
in the female. The uropods and the very deep
telson form a broad tailfan. cervical groove
abdomen
HABITAT These fossils are found in
shallow, marine seas.
Linuparus
eocenicus
Woods; London
Clay; Early
Eocene; UK. segments
carapace of abdomen
Typical length Dorsal view
20cm (8in)
Portunites stintoni
Typical length Quayle; London Clay;
2cm (3 ⁄4in) Early Eocene; UK.
Archaeogeryon
Archaeogeryon has a near-hexagonal carapace.
The eye sockets are large, with straight margins
to the side, bearing three to five teeth.
Towards the rear, margins are long
and straight. The massive claws
are of different sizes, whilst
the walking legs are strong,
except for the fifth which is
flattened, suggesting this
creature could swim. The
abdomen comprises
seven segments, with
the male abdomen
broadly triangular. Dorsal view
large carapace
HABITAT It is
believed that flattened
Archaeogeryon was a fifth leg
deep-water predator.
swimming
paddle
Archaeogeryon
peruvianus (d’Orbigny);
Santa Cruz Beds; Early
Miocene; Argentina. Typical length 16cm (61 ⁄4in)
CHELICERATES
THE CHELICERATES include horseshoe Of the six pairs of appendages, the
crabs, spiders, and scorpions. They have first are claws for feeding (chelicerae),
bodies divided into a head and thorax the second are for various functions
shield and an abdomen. Unlike other (pedipalps), and the third to sixth are
arthropods, they have no antennae. for walking.
Euproops Euproops
rotundatus
A shield-shaped carapace covers the front (Prestwich);
of this sea scorpion, the upper surface Middle Coal
being divided into a middle and two Measures;
side regions by prominent ridges Late Carb.; UK.
near the simple eyes. The abdomen
is composed of seven fused
segments bearing marginal
spines. The last
fused
segment ends in a abdominal
long, articulating segments
tail spine (telson).
HABITAT Euproops
is generally believed to
be a non-marine genus. Typical length
4cm (11 ⁄ 2in)
Eusarcana
The body of this scorpion-like creature,
including its squarish head shield and six pairs
of appendages, is encased by a chitinous
pairs of
exoskeleton. Twelve other segments and a appendages
final pointed spine articulate with the head
shield and with each other. Underneath the
head shield are six pairs of appendages: the abdomen
first with a claw, the second to fifth for
walking, and the sixth paddle-shaped.
HABITAT Originally marine,
this genus later lived in Eusarcana
brackish to fresh water. obesa
(Woodward);
Typical length Ludlow Series;
12cm (43 ⁄4in) Silurian; UK.
Paraisobuthus powerful
claws
This aquatic scorpion has abdominal plates
divided into two lobes. The first two pairs of
coxae (the leg segments nearest to the body)
walking
are greatly enlarged into maxillary lobes for legs
feeding. The carapace is squarish, with two
well-developed cheeks separated by a deep body
groove. The stinger is very similar in shape
to those of Recent terrestrial scorpions.
long tail
HABITAT These animals were largely aquatic,
being able to leave water for only a short
time. They are presumed to have been
carnivorous, as are modern scorpions, but
the stinger may have been stinger
used for defence as well Paraisobuthus
as attack. prantli Kjellesvig-
Waering; Radnice Group; Typical length
Late Carboniferous; Czech Republic. 7cm (23 ⁄4in)
Dolomedes
The cephalothorax of this true spider is slightly longer than it is broad, and
high and convex near the eyes. Set in two rows, the eyes in the posterior
row are larger. The legs are strongly developed and of almost equal length,
except for the third pair which is shorter.
legs
Dolomedes sp.; Kauri
HABITAT Dolomedes
lives near fresh Gum; Pleistocene;
water, running New Zealand.
on the surface
to capture its cephalothorax
insect prey.
abdomen
Specimen in
kauri resin
Typical length
2.5cm (1in) spinnerets for filament secretion
INSECTS
INSECTS ARE TERRESTRIAL and the Early Devonian, are wingless.
freshwater arthropods, with greater However, the majority are winged,
diversity of species than any other and, by the Late Carboniferous, this
animal. Their bodies are divided into group became the first animals to evolve
head, thorax, and abdomen, with three powered flight. Most insects undergo
pairs of walking legs attached to the a metamorphosis, with a pupa as a
thorax. The earliest insects, found in resting stage.
Archimylacris
ironstone nodule
Mesoleuctra
Mesoleuctra was a slender, aquatic antennae
nymph with a terrestrial adult, with
folded wings. The nymph had two head
tails (cerci) and four wing pads.
Hydrophilus head
The forewings of Hydrophilus are
modified into hindwing cases (elytra) thorax
in the adult. These, along with the
abdominal hairs, trap air and act
as air reservoirs under water. elytra
HABITAT Both young and adult live
in fresh water, feeding on plant and animal
matter. The larvae are carnivorous.
REMARK This specimen was mired
in asphalt, which had naturally
seeped into a shallow lake in sandy
wetland. Such “tar” pits preserved
a wealth of Pleistocene animals tar sand
in California, USA, including
imperial mammoths and
sabretoothed cats. Hydrophilus
sp.; Tar sands;
Typical length Pleistocene;
3cm (11 ⁄4in) USA.
Range: Pliocene–Recent Distribution: N. America, Europe Occurrence:
78 | Invertebrates
Group: COLEOPTERA Subgroup: OMMATIDAE Informal name: Beetle
Blapsium
This beetle has folded wings with roughly fissile
sculptured elytra (compare Hydrophilus, p.77). sandstone
The basal leg segments (coxae) of the hindlegs
evidently do not divide the first ventral plate
(sternite) of the abdomen. The coxae, which
were attached to the thorax by muscles,
thorax
have dropped out, leaving cavities.
coxal
HABITAT Blapsium was an omnivorous
cavities
scavenger which lived close to the sea. It is
found fossilized alongside marine shells.
REMARK The Stonesfield Slate is famous for its
fossils, which are a mixture of marine dwellers,
land animals, and plants washed out to sea.
Blapsium egertoni
Westwood; Stonesfield
Typical length
Slate; Middle Jurassic; UK. 2cm (3 ⁄4in)
Bibio
This insect has only one pair of wings (forewings), folded and developed internally,
with the hindwings reduced to balance organs (halteres), characteristic of true
flies. The forewings have reduced vein patterns and pigmentation.
HABITAT March flies typically inhabit grassland, often appearing in limestone
spring (hence their name) and visiting flowers.
Bibio maculatus
Heer; Miocene;
Croatia.
forewing
abdomen
Typical length
leaf impression 1cm (3 ⁄ 8in)
BRACHIOPODS
ALTHOUGH LIVING SPECIES are now the smaller brachial valve on the dorsal
rare, brachiopods are common in marine side. A stalk (pedicle) usually emerges
fossiliferous rocks. Over 3,000 genera from the rear of the pedicle valve,
have been described, from the Cambrian attaching the brachiopod to the sea
to Recent times, and they form the most floor. The two main groups – the
abundant fauna in many Palaeozoic hinged Articulata and the hingeless
rocks. The shell comprises two valves: Inarticulata – are further divided into
the pedicle valve on the ventral side, and 12 orders.
Platystrophia
Platystrophia biforata
maximum
width along (Schlotheim); Hudson
The shell of Platystrophia is near-rectangular in outline, hinge line River Group;
with strongly convex valves. The shell reaches its Ordovician; USA.
maximum width along the hinge line, and the hinge
often extends to form sharp “ears” (auricles).
A conspicuous depression (sulcus) is found
on the pedicle valve, with a corresponding
fold on the brachial valve. The line of junction
between the shells is strongly folded at
the front edge. Numerous sharp-crested
ribs diverge towards the shell margins.
Platystrophia was a medium-sized brachiopod.
HABITAT Platystrophia was
attached by a short pedicle to deep fold
lime-mud and sandy substrates. Typical length
4cm (11 ⁄ 2in) sharp-crested ribs
Dicoelosia twin-lobed
pedicle valve
Dicoelosia bilobata
(Linnaeus); Wenlock
The shell of this brachiopod has a characteristic
Limestone; Silurian;
bilobed, near-triangular outline, with a strongly
UK.
convex pedicle valve and less convex brachial
valve. Both valves have a pronounced sulcus,
with a strongly incurved beak on the pedicle
valve. The hinge line is of variable width, but is
generally short. The interarea (between the
valves) is medium-sized, with an open
groove for passage of the pedicle.
Numerous fine ribs diverge near
the front of the shell.
Productus ribs
Productus productus
(Martin); Carboniferous
The shell has a flat to concave brachial
Limestone; Early
valve that is nearly circular in outline.
Carboniferous; UK.
The pedicle valve is thick and strongly
convex, with a short hinge line and
long trail (the extension of the valve
rugae
beyond the mantle cavity). The
ornament consists of numerous
ribs and irregular wrinkles. pedicle valve
Scattered spines can be found
on the pedicle valve, but are
usually preserved only as trail
spine bases. No spines are
found on the brachial valve.
Typical length
3cm (11 ⁄4in) prostrate spines concentric wrinkles
Pentamerus oblongus
(J. de C. Sowerby); Jupiter
smooth shell
Typical length Formation; Silurian;
4.5cm (13 ⁄4in) Canada.
Pugnax
acuminatus
(J. Sowerby);
Carboniferous
Typical length Limestone; Early
4.5cm (13 ⁄4in) Carboniferous; UK. deep sulcus
Pleuropugnoides
Pleuropugnoides pleurodon (J. Phillips);
A relatively small but distinctive brachiopod, pedicle valve Carboniferous Limestone;
Pleuropugnoides had a shell that is nearly Early Carboniferous; UK.
triangular in outline. The pedicle valve is
convex at the back but concave towards
the front, developing a large sulcus.
The brachial valve is globular, with
a broad front fold. The line of
junction between the valves
(commissure) undulates strongly
at the fold crest. Sharp, diverging
ribs ornament the shell.
Cyclothyris foramen
Cyclothyris difformis
(Valenciennes);
The shell of this relatively large and conspicuous Lower Chalk; Late
rhynchonellid is characterized by a wide, Cretaceous; UK.
near-triangular outline. The beak is erect,
and contains a large hole (foramen) for
the pedicle. Both valves are convex,
with a pronounced sulcus on the
pedicle valve and a fold on the
brachial valve. The front
junction line zigzags,
and numerous small,
sharp-crested ribs
ornament both valves.
HABITAT Cyclothyris
is commonly found in
sediments that have been
deposited in moderate- to
high-energy environments.
fine ribs
The brachial valve of this genus is more
convex than the pedicle valve, and has a
broad, shallow fold. The pedicle valve
has a small depression and a slight,
curved-in beak. The front junction
line is often slightly deflected
towards the brachial valve. The
ornament consists of numerous
fine, rounded ribs, and
prominent, concentric growth
lines commonly forming frills
on both valves.
HABITAT Atrypa lived in shallow
water on soft substrates.
deflected
junction line
Atrypa sp.; Eke
Typical length Beds; Silurian;
growth-line frills
1.2cm (1 ⁄ 2in) Sweden.
Meristina obtusa
umbo (J. de C. Sowerby);
Wenlock Lime-
Typical length stone; Silurian; UK.
4.5cm (13 ⁄4in) sulcus in pedicle valve
Mucrospirifer
The shell of this relatively large spiriferid reaches its maximum width along the
hinge line, which is extended outwards to form sharp points. The brachial valve Mucrospirifer
has a pronounced fold, with a corresponding depression on the pedicle valve. mucronata
The apex area of the pedicle valve contains a small hole for the pedicle. (Conrad);
HABITAT Mucrospirifer lived in soft, muddy substrates. Hamilton Group;
umbo of
pedicle valve
Devonian;
Canada.
regularly
overlapping
Typical length 2.5cm (1in) growth layers
Aulacophoria pedicle
valve small interarea
In outline, the shell of this medium-sized
orthid varies from nearly circular to
nearly square. The brachial valve
is more convex than the pedicle
valve, and has a broad front fold,
corresponding to the depression
on the pedicle valve. The
pedicle itself is prominent, and
the interarea relatively narrow.
Both valves are ornamented
by many fine ribs.
HABITAT Aulacophoria
lived in lime-mud sediments.
Aulacophoria
keyserlingiana
(de Koninck);
Typical length Yoredales; Early
3cm (11 ⁄4in) Carboniferous; UK. fold in brachial valve
Epithyris maxillata
(J. de C. Sowerby);
Bradford Clay; Middle
Jurassic; UK. brachial valve Typical length
4.5cm (13 ⁄4in)
Dictyothyris foramen
Strophomena well-
developed
Strophomena grandis (J. de C.
Sowerby); Cheney Longville
sockets
The shell of this medium-sized brachiopod Formation; Ordovician; UK.
has a convex brachial valve and a concave
pedicle valve, with the maximum width along
the hinge line. Internally, the brachial valve
has well-developed sockets and a
prominent cardinal process (the
projection from the hinge line to which
the diductor muscles are attached).
The hole for the pedicle is small and
partially covered by a plate. Both
valves are ornamented by fine ribs,
which diverge towards the front
of the shell.
HABITAT The small
foramen indicates that
Strophomena was
probably free-lying,
resting with its brachial
valve downwards
on a variety of front Brachial valve
Typical length junction
soft substrates. (interior)
3cm (11 ⁄4in) line fine ribs
Cyrtina sulcus on
pedicle
valve
distinctive
cap-like
shape
The shell of this small- to medium-sized spiriferid
has a characteristic cap-like shape and maximum
width along the hinge line. On the pedicle valve
there is a large, triangular interarea, with a large
hole for the pedicle near the apex, and a distinct
sulcus that widens towards the front. The brachial
valve is weakly convex, with an unornamented
fold and depression. Several distinct ribs
on both valves produce an undulating
junction line, and growth lines become
prominent near the front margins.
lateral
HABITAT Cyrtina lived in
folds
soft sediments.
prominent
growth lines aperture
covered
by plates
Cyrtina hamiltonensis
(Hall); Hamilton Group; Typical length
Devonian; Canada. 5cm (17⁄ 8in)
Derbyia grandis
Derbyia short umbo (Waagen); Middle
The shell of this medium-sized Productus Limestone;
strophomenid is semicircular in Early Permian; India.
outline, with convex valves. A
shallow depression may appear
in the pedicle valve, the depth
of which may vary across the
shell. The short, stubby apex
area is sometimes offset. ornament
Numerous fine, radiating ribs of fine
and prominent growth ribs
lines ornament
growth
the shell.
lines
HABITAT It is likely
that Derbyia was Pedicle
free-living. valve
Typical length 3.5cm (1 ⁄ 5in)
2
Spiriferina umbo
growth
lines
undulating
junction line ribs
Brachial
Spiriferina walcotti valve
Typical length (J. Sowerby); Lower Lias;
1.5cm (5 ⁄ 8in) Early Jurassic; UK. fold
Goniorhynchia boueti
(Davidson); Boueti Bed;
Forest Marble; Middle
Typical length Jurassic; UK. ornament of
2cm (3 ⁄4in) fold sharp-crested ribs
Digonella foramen
The shell of this relatively small- to medium-sized
terebratulid is long and oval to sack-shaped in outline. pedicle valve
Both valves are convex, and the shell reaches its
maximum width near the front. The apex area is
flattened towards the back, and the pedicle is brachial
curved and short, with a large opening (foramen) valve
for the stalk to pass through. The front line of
junction is straight, and there is no ornament
other than the very fine growth lines.
HABITAT Digonella lived in soft sediment,
predominately lime mud, where it was attached
to shell fragments by a short pedicle. It is abundant
in shallow-water, fine-grained limestones.
Digonella digona
(J. Sowerby); Bradford
Clay; Middle Jurassic; UK.
Typical length
2.5cm (1in) straight line of junction
Terebrirostra
bargensa
(d’Orbigny);
Lower Chalk; Late
Typical length 4cm (11 ⁄ 2in)
Cretaceous; France.
Kingena lemanensis
(Pictet & Le Roux); fine growth
lines
Shenley Limestone;
Early Cretaceous; UK.
Typical length
3cm (11 ⁄4in)
Danocrania
Danocrania tuberculata (Nilsson);
The shell of this small brachiopod is almost Danian chalk;
circular in outline, with a straight rear margin. Paleocene; Denmark.
The shape of the pedicle valve conforms
to the underlying substrate. Both valves
exhibit a well-developed pair of
circular muscle scars, accompanied
by smaller muscle scars, and both
thicken at their front margins.
Apart from surface blisters
(pustules), the ornament
consists of concentric growth
lines, and may have provided
some form of camouflage.
HABITAT Most genera in the family
are cemented to hard substrates by
their pedicle valves.
REMARK The family appeared in the
Early Mesozoic, and is still alive in today’s
oceans. They are unique in lacking a pedicle.
pustulose ornament
Cancellothyris
This medium-sized to relatively large brachiopod is large pedicle foramen
characterized by an egg-shaped shell, with convex
massive umbo
valves and a short but massive apex area that
is truncated by a large pedicle opening.
The largest specimens may display a
slight fold in the brachial valve and
a corresponding depression (sulcus)
in the pedicle valve. The shell of brachial valve
Cancellothyris has an external
ornament of growth lines and
numerous fine ribs.
HABITAT Cancellothyris was numerous
attached to hard surfaces by a fine ribs
stout pedicle. It is commonly
found in clusters, especially in
shallow-water, high-energy
environments such as Cancellothyris
rocky shorelines. It also platys Brunton &
inhabited crevices Hillier; Alexander
and fissures. Bay Formation;
Late Pliocene;
Typical length 2cm (3 ⁄4in) slight fold South Africa.
BIVALVES
BIVALVES ARE MOLLUSCS in which the Bivalves feed by filtering particles from
shells are made up of two valves connected the water through siphons. Although they
by a ligament of organic material, rarely possess a foot, they have limited mobility.
preserved in fossils. The valves are articulated Many burrow in sediment or bore into
by a hinge, usually with interlocking teeth. stone or wood. Others cement themselves
In most cases the valves are closed by two to submerged objects, or attach themselves
main muscles, whose points of attachment with a byssus of organic threads. Bivalves
to the shell are marked by distinct scars. are classified by their hinges.
Nuculana marieana
(Aldrich); Woods Bluff Typical length
Beds; Early Eocene; USA. Exterior 2cm (3 ⁄4in)
Slava interrupta
Slava limestone matrix
(J. de C. Sowerby);
The medium-sized shell is thin and convex. Silurian;
Below the beak in each valve is a triangular Czech Republic.
ledge with diverging grooves but no hinge
teeth. The valves are ornamented with
radiating ribs and spaced, concentric folds.
Idonearca beak
fine ribs
diverging
Typical length 3cm (11 ⁄4in) hinge teeth ligament area
Modiolus beak
Modiolus ligeriensis
The shell is elongate, thin, and tumid, (d’Orbigny);
with a beak very near the front. Greensand; Late
There is a straight hinge with a shore Cretaceous; France.
ligament, and the posterior margin is
raised into an angular flange. The ribs
fine diverging
are typically smooth, but often have ribs
close diverging threads over the whole
surface. The outer shell is brittle; the
inside is lined with a layer of nacre.
HABITAT This bivalve usually lives
gregariously in shallow water, attached
to a solid object.
long hinge
angular flange
Gervillaria alaeformis
(J. Sowerby); Lower
Greensand; Early
Cretaceous; UK.
Pinna hartmanni
(Zieten); Lower Lias;
Early Jurassic; UK.
longitudinal ribs
ridge
Modern pinna
long hinge
for ligament
anterior buried
in mud in life
iridescent area
dark ligament
terminal beak
Typical length
20cm (8in)
Volviceramus
involutus
(J. de C.Sowerby);
Typical length concentric Upper Chalk;
30cm (12in) ridges Late Cretaceous; UK.
Aviculopecten
The small shell is obliquely fan-shaped, with
a short hinge. Both valves have the posterior
ear enlarged into a pointed wing, while
the anterior ear is set off by a byssal notch,
much deeper in the right valve. The shell is
ornamented with radial ribs. In one valve
the ribs increase by bifurcation, and in the
other by forming intermediary ribs.
HABITAT Aviculopecten was anchored
to objects by a byssal thread.
byssal notch
Aviculopecten
tenuicoullis (Dana);
Carboniferous;
Australia.
Typical length
2.5cm (1in) posterior wing
Bositra
shale
Bositra radiata
(Goldfuss); Upper Lias; concentric
The roughly circular shell has concentric Early Jurassic; UK. ridges
undulations, a short hinge, and poorly
developed auricles.
HABITAT The lack of a clear byssal notch
suggests that the animal might have
been free-swimming, but it is more
likely to have lived in colonies,
attached to organic matter by
a few byssal threads.
REMARK This genus was
previously included
in Posidonia.
Crushed
Typical length pyrite formed by decayed shells
3cm (11 ⁄4in) organic material
Pecten beudanti
Basterot;
Miocene;
France.
ear
ribs
hinge line
ligament pit
Flattened
left valve ridges Typical length
8cm (31 ⁄ 8in)
Gryphaea arcuata
Gryphaea (Lamarck); Lower
The heavy shell is composed mostly of Lias; Early
calcite. The concave right valve fits like a Jurassic; UK.
lid within the larger left valve, which has
a narrow, inrolled beak. Internally, the
single muscle scar is circular; the adult
hinge has no teeth.
HABITAT Gryphaea lived on muddy
sea beds, originally cemented to a
small particle of rock by its tip.
REMARK The coiled shell,
adapted for living in soft
sediment, is popularly called
the Devil’s Toenail.
inrolled beak
Two left
valves
coarse growth
Typical length ridges
7cm (23 ⁄4in)
Ostrea
compressirostra
Typical length (Say); Chesapeake growth ridges
12cm (43 ⁄4in) Group; Miocene; USA.
Rastellum Paired
valves
The narrow valves of the tubular-shaped
shell are composed of many sharp ridges
divided by deep, sharp furrows.
HABITAT This animal lived cemented by its
narrow beak to shell or coral in warm waters.
REMARK The vulnerable point where the
valves meet is hidden, probably as a
attachment
defence against predators.
area
sharp ridges
Whiteavesia
The triangularly ovate shell narrows
towards the inconspicuous beak.
The interior surface has ridges
that appear on internal moulds
and probably reflect fine
external ornament.
HABITAT A marine suspension
feeder, it is likely that this genus
was attached to the sea floor
by byssus threads.
REMARK This early genus
may have given rise to the
Mytiloids (see p.96) and
the Unionoids (see p.104),
although it does not show the
iridescence present in those
two groups.
internal
ridges
limestone Whiteavesia
matrix pholadiformis
Typical length 7cm (23 ⁄4in)
(Hall); Ordovician;
Internal mould Canada.
nacre
The small ovoid shells are lined by shiny nacre concentric
growth lines
on the inner surfaces. There are two rows of interlocking
hinge teeth separated by the ligament scar. The
inner lips of the shell are lightly serrated; the
outer shell is ornamented with fine radial
lines and concentric ribs.
HABITAT Nucula is a deposit feeder living partially
buried in muddy sand. It inhabits both coastal
marine and deep water environments.
HABITAT The interlocking hinge teeth and the tough
slippery nacre provide a defence against predation.
Nucula gracilenta;
S.V. Wood; Blackheath
hinge teeth
Formation; Early Eocene; UK.
Typical length 1.5cm (5 ⁄ 8in)
Unio Joined
valves
The oblong to ovate shell is rather smooth, with
a bluish or purplish pearl interior. The middle
shell layer is prismatic and covered with a
thin organic layer. There are two hinge ligament
teeth situated in front of the beak,
and two long teeth behind it.
HABITAT This animal lives in an upright
position, partly embedded in the sands,
silts, and gravels of lakes and rivers. Its
larvae burrow under the scales of fish, but
drop off later, ensuring a wide dispersal.
beak
Mangyschlakella Shells in
sandstone
The thick valves of Mangyschlakella are
semicircular, and each is divided into two parts:
the main area, with obliquely concentric rows
of tubercles, and the smaller posterior slope
(the escutcheon), which is relatively
smooth. Internally the shells are
iridescent. Two corrugated
and diverging teeth,
suspended below the
beak of the right
valve, fit into sockets
in the left valve.
HABITAT This clam
flourished in the shallow
seas of the Mesozoic Era.
eroded beak
tubercle rows
Fimbria subpectunculus
Fimbria (d’Orbigny); Calcaire
Fimbria has a tumid, ovate shell. The Grossier; Middle
ornament is netted, with stronger Eocene; France.
concentric ridges at first, but
then file-like, radial ribs that
thicken at both ends of
the valve. The whole
shell margin is
crenulated on the
inside by a row of
denticles. There are
two main teeth
below the beak,
and two lateral
teeth in each valve.
HABITAT This
suspension feeder lives
in shallow, warm seas.
concentric
ridges
netted
Typical length 8cm (31 ⁄ 8in) ornament
Venericor
denticles
The large, thick, oval to triangular shell has a
prominent beak. When very young, it has
narrow, radial ribs, which may be armed with
small tubercles. These soon become smooth,
flat ribbons separated by shallow grooves. muscle scar
In each valve the wide, triangular hinge
plate bears three massive teeth. The
inner shell margin is marked by a
row of flat denticles.
HABITAT Venericor lived in warm,
shallow waters, burrowing into the
sand or silt.
hinge plate
REMARK Paired valves in life beak
position are found in large
numbers in some strata.
Venericor planicosta
(Lamarck); Earnley
Formation; Middle broad, flat ribs
Typical length
Eocene; UK. 7.5cm (3in)
Neocrassina concentric
ridges
The thick shell has regular concentric
ridges. The hinge is thick, with three main
teeth in the right valve and two in the left.
HABITAT Neocrassina burrows into mud,
sand, or gravel offshore, to considerable
depths. It is most characteristic of the
Boreal and Arctic regions.
REMARK Geologists regard
it as a good indicator of
cold conditions.
Neocrassina
shells in
limestone Neocrassina
elegans
(J. de C.
Sowerby);
Inferior Oolite;
Typical length Middle
2cm (3 ⁄4in) Jurassic; UK.
hole made
Bathytormus by predator
muscle scar
lateral tooth
Typical length cardinal teeth
2cm (3 ⁄4in)
Cardinia break
Cardinia ovalis
Typical length (Stuchbury); Lower Lias;
1.7cm (5 ⁄ 8in) Early Jurassic; UK.
Acrosterigma A range of
Smooth, radial ribs separated by grooves shell sizes
ornament the elliptical shell. The hinge plate is
small and sharply curved. In the middle of the well-developed
hinge of the left valve are two small, diverging lateral teeth
teeth, which meet one narrow tooth in the right
valve. The front end of the hinge is extended to
form one or two lateral teeth. On the other side
is a raised place (the nymph) where
the ligament is attached. The
inside edges of both valves
are sharply furrowed.
HABITAT This creature
burrows into the sands,
silts, and muds of
shallow tropical seas.
Acrosterigma dalli
(Heilprin); Plio-
grooves Pleistocene; USA.
separating
smooth ribs
Arctica umbonaria
Arctica beak
(Lamarck);
The thick, smooth shell of Arctica is ovate Pliocene; Italy.
to heart-shaped, with the beak turned
towards the shorter anterior end. In
each valve the hinge has three teeth
below the beak, and a long lateral
tooth behind. The hinge plate in growth
front of the cardinal teeth is pitted lines
and crenulated.
Lirophora
Lirophora ceramota
concentric
cords
(Gardner); Chipola
The ovate to triangular shell has its Formation; Early
beak turned forwards. The valves are Miocene, USA.
ornamented with concentric cords
worn
and radial threads and there
ornament
are three diverging hinge
teeth in each valve.
Internally, the muscle
scars are joined by the
pallial line, which has a
short embayment in
front of the rear scar.
HABITAT This clam
burrows below the
sand in shallow seas.
Potamomya
wedge-shaped
shell
ovate shell
Potamomya plana
Typical length (J. Sowerby); Headon Hill
1.5cm (5 ⁄ 8in) Formation; Late Eocene; UK.
concentric
growth lines
flattened
Typical length posterior
3.5cm (13 ⁄ 8in) end
Teredina Cross-section
Teredina was equipped with two small, of log
inflated, triangular valves, cemented to a
tube. When young, the two valves gaped
widely both at front and rear, but Detail
later a callum was secreted to
cover the anterior gape. As
the animal grew it enlarged
its tube in stages.
HABITAT With the use of
its valves, this animal bored its
way into wood submerged in
fresh to brackish water.
Teredina personata
(Lamarck); London
Clay Formation;
Early Eocene; UK.
tubes deviate
to avoid others
pyrite crystals
infill
Vaccinites vesiculosus
(Woodward); Late
Cretaceous; Turkey.
lower valve
Typical length attachment with vertical
10cm (4in) point ribs
Range: Late Cretaceous Distribution: Europe, N.E. Africa, USA, Asia Occurrence:
Solenomorpha tapering
rear end
The fairly long, narrow shell of Solenomorpha is widest
near the front, where the beak is situated, but then
tapers gently behind. The paired valves, which have
a slight gape at the posterior end, are smooth,
and have concentric growth lines.
HABITAT Solenomorpha
burrowed in soft sediments.
Solenomorpha
minor (McCoy);
Carboniferous
Limestone; Early
Carboniferous; UK.
Internal mould
Typical length
1.8cm (3/4in)
Pholadomya
This surface of the shell of Pholadomya is roughened
by numerous minute pustules. The radial ribs,
crossed by weaker concentric ridges, are
strongest in mid-valve. The hinge is thin, radial ribs
without teeth. The outer shell generally
dissolves away, leaving a pearly film
around the shell’s internal mould.
The interior is iridescent.
HABITAT Pholadomya inhabited
shallow seas, buried in sand or
mud. Surviving species live in
deep water. Fossils can be
found in life position, with
the valves closed.
Pholadomya
ambigua
Typical length
(J. Sowerby); Middle Lias;
4cm (11/2in) Early Jurassic; UK.
Dentalium
strong, regular ribs
tube widens
The narrow, tusk-like, tubular at the
shell has strong, sharply angular, anterior end
raised ribs running along its
length. At the smaller, posterior
end the curvature is strong, but this
tends to straighten with growth. The
foot and tentacled head emerge from
the larger, anterior end of the shell.
HABITAT Dentalium lives on the sea floor
at a range of depths and temperatures.
Dentalium sexangulum
Typical length Gmelin in Linnaeus;
5cm (2in)
Pliocene; Italy.
Range: Middle Triassic–Recent Distribution: Worldwide Occurrence:
Helminthochiton
The large shell is made up of a narrow line of strongly Valves
eight squarish valves, ornamented with granules ridged
and ridges. On the tail valve and median valves median
valve
are two small flanges, embedded in the girdle
in life and overlapping one another. The head
valve is smaller, semicircular, and without
the flanges. The whole shell is angled
along the back, forming a blunt ridge tail valve
from head to tail.
flange
HABITAT Helminthochiton lived in ornament of
warm seas on algae-covered debris. ridges
Helminthochiton turnacianus
(de Ryckholt); Early Typical length
Carboniferous; Belgium. 7cm (23/4in)
GASTROPODS
GASTROPODS ARE the largest, most the shell altogether. Shells are composed
successful class of molluscs, and have of calcium carbonate, usually in the
been able to exploit a wide variety of form of aragonite, but sometimes in
marine, freshwater, and land habitats. layers of calcite. An inner nacreous layer
They have a head with eyes and a mouth, is characteristic of some more early forms,
a flattened foot for crawling, and viscera but the organic outer coat of many living
that are generally coiled and carried in a gastropods is usually lost in fossils. Some
spiral shell. A few groups cease the coiling families have an inhalant siphon, emerging
at some stage, and some have abandoned through a channel in the aperture.
trumpet-like,
Bellerophon notched aperture
Euomphalus pentangulus
Euomphalus (J. Sowerby); Carboniferous
The disc-shaped, coiled shell has Limestone; Carboniferous;
a slightly raised spire. The whorls Ireland.
are stepped, owing to a narrow
notch in the growth lines, forming
a sharp ridge. Successive internal
walls seal off early whorls.
HABITAT It lived on
marine vegetation.
sharp ridge
Pleurotomaria deshayesii
Typical length Deslongchamps; Middle groove formed fine, spiral
6cm (21 ⁄ 2in) Lias; Early Jurassic; France. by lip notch threads
narrower
anterior end
Diodora floridana alternating thick
Typical length 5cm (2in) Gardner; Pliocene; USA. and thin ribs
Symmetrocapulus beak
coiled apex,
This limpet had a large, cap-shaped shell with now eroded
an oval margin, ornamented with numerous
narrow, radiating ribs interrupted by
irregular, concentric folds. The
first two small whorls are
smooth, turned forward,
and dextrally coiled, a
little to the left of the
shell’s highest point.
HABITAT This marine
limpet was adapted for
grazing on rock surfaces.
short
Symmetrocapulus rugosus anterior
slope
Typical length
(J. de C. Sowerby); Inferior narrow ribs
3.5cm (11 ⁄4in) Oolite; Middle Jurassic; France.
Calliostoma shallows
Shaped like a regular cone with flattened sides, the thinnish sutures
shell has shallow sutures separating the whorls. The whorls
are ornamented with a number of fine, spiral cords, often flat-sided whorls
bearing numerous round granules. These cords are with granular,
spiral cords
continued on the flat base, which has no umbilicus.
The oblique lip partly conceals the aperture.
oblique
HABITAT Various species Calliostoma lip
inhabit rocky shores. nodulosum (Solander
in Brander); Barton
Clay Formation;
Middle Eocene; UK.
Typical length
3cm (11 ⁄4in) iridescent interior
This nerite had a thick, heavy, oval shell with a low, conical
spire. The early whorls are regularly coiled and visible at
the apex, in the right posterior quarter of the shell. A layer
of polished enamel over the spire obscures the spiral
coiling and forms a thick pad over the base, ending
in a toothed shelf halfway across the aperture.
A separate shelly place (operculum) closed
the aperture in life.
HABITAT Velates lived on sand in shallow waters –
its shell’s weight providing stability in strong currents.
thickened
pad
Velates perversus
(Gmelin); Early
Eocene; France.
narrow, semi-
circular aperture
outer lip
Typical length
3cm (11 ⁄4in)
umbilicus
partly concealed
Typical length by inner lip edge of
2.5cm (1in) aperture
Bourguetia
The large and moderately thick shell of Bourguetia has convex
whorls separated by well-marked sutures. Its extended spire regularly
appears slightly turreted and is a little longer than the final increasing
whorls
whorl. The upper part of the shell is ornamented with
shallow grooves, dividing the surface into narrow,
flat, spiral ribbons. On the basal part of the
shell these become thicker, more prominent
cords. The aperture is oval with a moderately
continuous margin. long spire with
clearly indented
HABITAT Despite a superficial suture
similarity to Viviparus (see
above), Bourguetia was a
fully marine snail that
lived among coral
and sponge reefs narrow, flat,
in warm and spiral ribbons
shallow seas.
Bourguetia
saemanni (Oppel);
Osmington Oolite; more prominent Typical length
Middle Jurassic; UK. cords on base 11cm (41 ⁄ 2in)
(J. de C. Sowerby);
Woolwich Beds;
Paleocene; UK.
broad, shallow
channel Typical length 4cm (11/2in)
HABITAT Turritella
Turritella terebralis
is a suspension feeder,
usually abundant Lamarck; Coquillat
in shallow off- de Leognan
shore waters. Formation; Early
Miocene; France
thin lip
fine, curved
growth lines
Tessarolax fittoni
(Forbes); Lower
Greensand; Early
curved basal
Cretaceous; UK.
spine
Typical length 6cm (21/2in) lip enlarged with two labial spines
aperture
enamelled Struthiolaria ameghinoi
and thickened (von Ihering); Santa Cruz
into a pad
Formation; Early Miocene;
Typical length 4cm (11/2in) Argentina.
Rimella fissurella
Rimella (Linnaeus); Calcaire
The elongate shell of Rimella had gently convex whorls, Grossier; Middle
ornamented with numerous sharp ribs. The spiral Eocene; France.
sculpture consists of close cords, largely obsolete tip of channel
in some species. The aperture is narrow bent near apex
and lens-shaped, and the last whorl
convex
tapers down to a narrow rostrum, whorls
separated from the lip by a distinct
notch. When adult, a long, narrow
channel was secreted from the
upper corner of the aperture to
the apical area, where it was
usually bent round. As this
channel was too narrow to
accommodate the syphon,
its function is unclear.
HABITAT Rimella was
probably a herbivorous snail
that lived in the muds and
sands of warm, shallow seas. notch in
base of lip
Crepidula falconeri
Crepidula growth line showing
earlier margin Newton; Middle
Beginning with one simple juvenile Eocene; Nigeria.
whorl, Crepidula rapidly expands into
an elongate-oval body whorl, smooth
in some species but ridged or spiny in
others. On the underside, the wide
aperture is half covered by a thin,
polished shelf (septum), which
protects the viscera.
HABITAT The animal is a filter
feeder in shallow seas. Its sedentary
habit is indicated by
the irregular, wavy
shell margin, which
conforms to the shape
of the substrate. Typical length simple, one-turn, irregularly wavy margin
2cm (3 ⁄4in) spiral apex matches substrate
Xenophora
This has a moderately low, conical shell with shallow
sutures, ornamented with oblique, interrupted ridges.
The flat base with its narrow aperture is overhung by
a thin, wavy peripheral margin.
HABITAT Hidden beneath its shell, the animal
browses on micro-organisms in the silty mud of
fairly deep waters.
REMARK Xenophora has acquired the habit
of selecting bits of shell or other debris from
the sea bed and cementing them to the lobes
of the periphery, where they become incorporated.
periphery of
earlier whorl Basal view
constricted aperture
with concave lip
Xenophora crispa
(König); Pliocene;
Italy.
aperture
small tubercles
globular body
lips lined with
whorl, glazed with
different-sized
layer of enamel
teeth
Phalium decussatum
(Linnaeus); Calcaire
tubular siphonal
Typical length Grossier; Middle channel
10cm (4in) Eocene; France.
Ficopsis
narrow apex
distinct
spire
Ficopsis had a thinnish shell tapering to
a narrow rostrum. The raised spire, which
is much shorter than the body whorl, has
gently convex whorls, a narrow apex,
and well-defined sutures. A latticework
of fine, regular threads covers the
whole shell. The body whorl is
convex and varies from being
evenly rounded to having a
polygonal profile, caused by
the accentuation of the slight
shoulder and spiral ridges.
The aperture is thin-lipped slight
and ovate, narrowing into shoulder
a long siphonal channel. angle
network of fine,
HABITAT This animal lived on raised threads
sandy substrates in warm regions.
narrow rostrum
ribs made up
Cirsotrema has an elongate calcitic shell, with convex of laminae
whorls separated by deep sutures, and an ornament
of numerous raised and frilled ribs, each made
up of a number of compressed laminae. In some
species they connect up from one whorl to
the next. The last rib frames the small,
circular aperture. A few weak
spirals are visible between,
and sometimes cross, the ribs, less prominent
while the base of the shell is spiral ornament
surrounded by a strong cord.
basal cord
HABITAT This marine-
dwelling animal is carnivorous,
using its long proboscis to
feed on sedentary creatures.
circular aperture
with no siphonal
channel
Cirsotrema lamellosum Typical length
(Brocchi); Pliocene; Italy. 3cm (11/4in)
Murexsul
turreted spire with
deep sutures
thick, rounded,
spiral ridges
Murexsul
octogonus rib made of row
(Quoy & Gaimard); of tubular spines
sinistral coiling
Neptunea angulata
Harmer; Red Crag;
Late Pliocene; UK. Typical length 9cm (31 ⁄ 2in)
Volutospina
The medium to large, biconic shell has an acutely pointed apex. Despite the
shallow sutures the spire has a turreted appearance, caused by the short ribs
which end in sharp spines on the shoulder. The body whorl is ornamented with
weak, flat, spiral ribbons, crossed by numerous inconspicuous vertical growth
lines. The rather narrow aperture tapers down to an open siphonal channel
and the outer lip is not thickened. There are several ridges on the columella,
the lowest one being the strongest, and a layer of enamel spreads from the
interior on to the body whorl.
Volutospina luctator
HABITAT This creature inhabited sandy
(Solander in Brander);
or muddy sea beds in warm waters.
Barton Clay Formation;
REMARK Like other volutes,
Volutospina was a fast- Middle Eocene; UK.
moving predator.
narrow apex
HABITAT Pseudoliva
lives on sand and silt in
shallow waters.
REMARK One species wide and shallow groove ends
survives in west Africa. siphonal channel in lip notch
Pseudoliva laudunensis
sharply incised
(Defrance); London Clay; groove around Typical length
Early Eocene; UK. base of whorl 3cm (11/4in)
Eoconus
Eoconus has a strong, medium-sized shell with
low, tightly
a largely smooth, conical body whorl, strongly coiled spire
angled to form a narrow platform at the top.
The spire is stepped and depressed with a
prominent central apex. A thin lip, parallel
with the body, forms the straight, narrow
aperture running the length of the whorl. platform
at top of
HABITAT These creatures live in warm whorl
waters on sand, silt, or hard bottoms, at
a variety of depths.
REMARK The Conidae are predatory; thin outer lip
they hunt worms, molluscs, and even
fish, using teeth that are adapted to
function as effective poison darts.
Eoconus sauridens
Conrad; Stone City Form- narrow channel
ation; Middle Eocene; USA. and aperture Typical length
6cm (21/2in)
Granosolarium
elaboratum
(Conrad); Gosport Sands; Typical length
Middle Eocene; USA. Top view 4cm (11/2in)
Bulla
apical umbilicus
Bulla ampulla
Linnaeus; Reef limestone; enamel on Typical length
Pleistocene; Red Sea. columella wall 2cm (3/4in)
Nerinea sp.;
Cretaceous; Israel.
columella ridge
visible in aperture
internal
ridge
Australorbis
flat base with
faint ornament
Australorbis
euomphalus
(J. Sowerby); Headon
Hill Formation; Late deeply sunk Typical length
Eocene; UK. whorls 3cm (11/4in)
Rillyarex preecei
Nordsieck; Bembridge Typical length
Limestone; Late Eocene; UK. aperture with rim 7cm (23/4 in)
NAUTILOIDS
NAUTILOIDS ARE EARLY, marine into a body chamber and many
cephalopods that possess a shell. smaller chambers. The chambered
They were most abundant in the part of the shell is known as the
Palaeozoic Era – 400 million years ago; phragmocone. Nautiloids have heads
today, only a single genus survives – with well-developed eyes, and grasping
the pearly nautilus of the south-west tentacles. They swim by squirting water
Pacific Ocean. The shell is divided out of the body cavity.
Cyrtoceras
The shell is strongly curved in an open hook
shape, and nearly circular in cross-section.
The posterior part is made up of numerous
closely spaced chambers, while the long
living chamber makes up the anterior
part of the shell.
long living chamber
HABITAT Experiments suggest that the numerous short
animal lived head-down in the water, chambers
probably near the bottom of the sea. It
was able to swim and alter its buoyancy. Cyrtoceras sp.;
REMARKS The specimen featured Ordovician;
is an internal mould, from which Czech Republic.
the original shell has been Typical length
completely lost. blunt termination 12cm (43/4in)
Huronia limestone
matrix
Shells of this genus have a large, straight siphuncle,
with long segments separated by strong constrictions.
Complex canals are present. The central canal
is very narrow.
HABITAT This genus lived in shallow seas
as a scavenger or predator. It was able to
swim and adjust its position in the water
column by moving liquid along the
siphuncle from chamber to chamber.
REMARK Only the robust siphuncle
of this species is preserved in the
specimen. The chambers and outer large segments
of siphuncle
wall are missing.
Huronia vertebralis
Stokes; Ordovician; Canada. strong
constrictions Typical length 20cm (8in)
Orthocycloceras fluminense
(Meneghini); Late Silurian;
Typical length 30cm (12in) Morocco.
Discitoceras
mould of
another fossil
Discitoceras
leveilleanum
(de Koninck);
Carboniferous Limestone;
Typical diameter Early Carboniferous;
15cm (6in) lreland.
Rayonnoceras
The shell of Rayonnoceras is straight and conical, with
a smooth surface. The centrally placed siphuncle has a
complex structure. Both the siphuncle and the convex
chambers are filled with calcareous deposits formed
during the life of the nautiloid.
HABITAT Rayonnoceras was probably
a bottom-dwelling, ambush predator
in a shallow-water marine environment.
REMARK The calcareous deposits in
the shell are thought to have acted as
ballast, to make the animal heavier.
Rayonnoceras
large, complex siphuncle
giganteum
(J. Sowerby);
Carboniferous chambers
Limestone; Early filled with
calcareous
Carboniferous; deposits Typical diameter
lreland. 20cm (8in)
Vestinautilus Vestinautilus
cariniferous
The shell is notable for its extremely (J. de C. Sowerby);
evolute form. It has an open umbilicus
Carboniferous;
and a distinctive mid-flank ridge, which
Locality unknown.
runs along each side, on which the
sutures form a forwardly directed
V-shaped fold. There are
numerous small chambers.
HABITAT Vestinautilus was
a poor swimmer, living on
the bottom of shelf seas.
open umbilicus
REMARK The specimen
is preserved as an internal
mould in limestone; the
body chamber has broken
away. The sutures are
well displayed.
Cross-section
mud-filled
chambers
narrow
umbilicus
Cenoceras sp.;
Inferior Oolite;
simple, curved Middle Jurassic; UK.
sutures
broken Cenoceras
chamber walls bradfordense (Crick);
Inferior Oolite;
Middle Jurassic; UK.
broken
chamber wall
Cross-section
body chamber
missing
outer wall
shell
siphuncle
Cenoceras sp.;
Inferior Oolite;
concavo-convex Middle Jurassic; UK.
chambers
narrow
umbilicus
original
aragonite
shell
irregular
folds
Cenoceras simillimum
(Foord & Crick); Lower
Lias; Early Jurassic; UK.
140 | Invertebrates
Group: NAUTILIDA Subgroup: ATURIIDAE Informal name: Nautilus
Aturia
The shell is very involute and
compressed, with a narrow, shallow
umbilicus and a rounded venter. Internal
The suture line has a strong, mould
backward-pointing fold
on the flank, which
gives it a superficial strong fold in
resemblance to some suture line
primitive Palaeozoic
ammonoids.
HABITAT Aturia
probably lived in narrow
umbilicus
relatively deep water;
the compressed shell
was streamlined to
allow fast movement.
REMARK The rounded
venter
specimen is an internal
mould of the chambered
part of the shell.
Aturia
praeziczac
Typical length (Oppenheim);
3cm (11 ⁄4in) Eocene; Egypt.
Rhyncholites
Typical length sp.; Eocene;
12cm (43 ⁄4in) biting edge Libya.
AMMONOIDS
AMMONOIDS EVOLVED from nautiloids the siphuncle (the tube connecting the
in the early Devonian period, about chambers of the shell), which is near
400 million years ago, and were abundant the outside of the shell (ventral).
in world seas for the following 370 million Ammonoidea sutures can be simple, as
years, after which they vanished suddenly found in Palaeozoic species, or complex,
at the end of the Cretaceous period. The as seen in Mesozoic species. Because
rapid evolution of ammonoids and their they are extinct, we know very little
widespread distribution makes them about the soft parts and life habits of the
of great value in the subdivision of Late ammonoids. It is rare to find the biting
Palaeozoic and Mesozoic time. As a group, jaws, the tongue-like, rasping radula, or
they are characterized by the position of the ink-sacs preserved in living chambers.
Clymenia limestone
matrix
Clymenia laevigata
(Münster); Late
Devonian; Germany.
broad
umbilicus
Typical diameter
4cm (11 ⁄ 2in) rounded venter
Soliclymenia paradoxa
(Münster); Late
Devonian; Germany.
triangular
coiling
Typical length 2cm (3 ⁄4in)
Merocanites
complex suture with
deep folds
living·
Ceratites chamber
limestone strong,
matrix simple ribs
suture
goniatitic
suture line
broad, narrow,
rounded venter deep umbilicus
Typical length 6cm (21 ⁄ 2in)
AMMONITES
AMMONITES ARE A FORM of ammonoid same time as other marine groups, such as
distinguished by their complex suture belemnites, and terrestrial groups, such
lines. They were abundant and diverse as dinosaurs. As both ammonites and all
in the seas of the Mesozoic Era, and they their close relatives are extinct, scientists
evolved very rapidly to produce numerous know very little about their mode of life.
species and genera. After a decline in What is known about them has been
diversity during the Late Cretaceous worked out mostly from experiments
period, ammonites became extinct at the with model shells in water tanks.
Phylloceras sp.;
Early Jurassic;
Typical diameter 10cm (4in) Mexico.
Lytoceras
Lytoceras fimbriatus
(J. de C. Sowerby);
The shell of Lytoceras is evolute, with a wide Middle Lias; Early
umbilicus. The whorl section is evenly Jurassic; UK.
rounded. The shell is ornamented with
fine, closely spaced ribs and less frequent
flanges, which pass uninterrupted over
the venter. The suture is complex.
HABITAT The shell is ill-adapted for fast
swimming, and it may have lived near the
bottom of the sea.
REMARK Like Phylloceras (see above),
Lytoceras is most abundant in
low-latitude, deep-water deposits
of the ancient Tethys Ocean. Typical length
fine ribs 10cm (4in)
Oxynoticeras oxynotum
(Quenstedt); Lower Lias;
Early Jurassic; UK.
cross-section of
individual, nearly
straight septa
chamber full of
yellow calcite
Psiloceras planorbis
(J. de C. Sowerby); Lower
Typical diameter Lias; Early Jurassic; UK.
7cm (23/4in)
simple
Amaltheus S-shaped ribs
Douvilleiceras
The shell is involute and compressed in profile. Strong,
simple ribs pass over the rounded venter, and are each tubercles
divided into numerous, even-sized tubercles, which
would originally have carried short spines.
Side View of
Douvilleiceras
view venter
inaequinodum
(Quenstedt); Early
Cretaceous;
Madagascar.
Typical diameter
10cm (4in)
Perisphinctes
(Dichotomoceras)
virguloides (Waagen);
Late Jurassic; Madagascar. Side umbilicus View of
Typical diameter
10cm (4in) view venter
Typical diameter
6cm (21/2in)
Pavlovia
This is a typical member of the abundant branching ribs
and widespread Late Jurassic family,
evolute shell
Perisphinctidae. Members of the family
form
are characterized by open, evolute
shell forms, rounded whorl sections,
and ornamentation of branching umbilicus
ribs. A long living chamber occupies
nearly a whole whorl of the shell.
The suture is complex.
HABITAT This genus lived in the
extensive Late Jurassic seas.
Pavlovia
sp.; Upper
Glauconite Series;
Typical diameter Late Jurassic;
4cm (11/2in) Greenland.
carved
fine, branching
ribs
Typical diameter
7cm (23/4in) rounded venter
Harpoceras
falciferum
(J. Sowerby);
Upper Lias;
Early Jurassic; UK.
Typical diameter sickle-shaped
12cm (43/4in) ribs
Hildoceras
Hildoceras had an evolute, laterally sickle-shaped
compressed shell. The coarse, widely-spaced, ribs interrupted
by groove
sickle-shaped ribbing on the sides is
interrupted by a groove. The suture
line is very complex. It has a very wide umbilicus
distinctive rectangular whorl
section, which on the venter
carries three low keels
separated by two grooves.
HABITAT Hildoceras was a
moderate swimmer in the
Early Jurassic shelf seas.
REMARK This specimen is well
preserved in a claystone nodule.
Hildoceras bifrons
Typical diameter (Bruguière); Upper Lias; triple-keeled
7cm (23/4 in) Early Jurassic; UK. venter
Bifericeras Macroconch
(female)
In common with many ammonites, the larger
shell (macroconch) of Bifericeras is the female,
and the smaller (microconch) is the male.
Females required a larger body size for egg
production and possible brooding habit.
HABITAT Bifericeras lived in open seas of
moderate depth, and either predated on or
scavenged small marine invertebrates.
larger body
for egg
production
Microconch
(male)
Bifericeras bifer
(Quenstedt); Lower Typical diameter
Lias; Early Jurassic; UK. 3cm (11/4in)
Pachydiscus
The family Pachydiscidae includes the giants
of the ammonite group, and specimens up
limestone-infilled
to 2m (6½ft) in diameter have been living chamber
found in Late Cretaceous rocks. The
shell is moderately involute and
compressed, and carries short, involute shell
gently curved ribs. The venter form
is rounded.
HABITAT A competent
swimmer, Pachydiscus lived in
open seas. rounded
venter
REMARK The specimen is
preserved in limestone but
retains patches of the
original shell.
original shell
material
Crioceratites open-coiled
whorls
The shell of Crioceratites is so loosely coiled
that the whorls are not in contact. The whorl
size increases rapidly. Stronger ribs carrying
tubercles are separated by two to three
weaker, finer ribs with no tubercles.
The venter is rounded.
ribs with
HABITAT This genus was adapted tubercles
to a predatory swimming habit in
moderately deep, shelf seas.
REMARK The loosely coiled
morphology evolved many times
in the ammonoids and nautiloids.
fine ribs
Mammites nodosoides
(Schlüter); Late Cretaceous;
Morocco.
coarse
ribbing
Placenticeras meeki
(BÖhm); Late
Cretaceous; USA.
former position
of aperture
umbilicus
smooth, almost
flat flank
faint ribs
on flank Typical diameter
20cm (8in)
Promicroceras
small, perfectly
Asteroceras shell
preserved
shells of
This limestone (known as Marston Marble) is Promicroceras
composed largely of closely packed, small,
but complete, shells of the ammonite
genus Promicroceras. A fragment of a
larger genus, Asteroceros, is present on
the corner of the block. Promicroceras’
shell is evolute, and is ornamented
by coarse, simple, straight ribs which
form a forward-directed flange over
the venter.
HABITAT Marston Marble was formed
by the mass mortality of Promicroceras,
resulting either from a major storm, or
perhaps poisoning by an algal bloom.
REMARK The ammonite shells were
rapidly buried in lime-mud, which
hardened into limestone.
Marston marble;
Lower Lias; Early
Jurassic; UK.
original shell
Typical diameter 2cm (3/4in)
venter carries
Echioceras low keel
Echioceras sp.;
Lower Lias;
Typical diameter Early Jurassic; UK. short, straight ribs
6cm (21/2 in) on evolute shell
Euhoplites
strong
ornament
of ribs and
The shell is moderately involute, and inflated tubercles
in profile. The flanks bear tubercles, from
which arise bunched ribs. The venter has
a narrow groove.
living chamber
HABITAT The numerous ribs and broken away
tubercles, together with the rectangular
profile of the whorl, would have offered
much resistance to water, and prevented
Euhoplites from swimming fast.
REMARK In life the shell would have been
three times the size of this fragment, which
has missing whorls.
Euhoplites opalinus
Spath; Gault Clay;
Early Cretaceous; UK.
original nacre
shell preserved
Typical diameter
3.5cm (13/8in) pyrite preservation
Schloenbachia varians
(J. de C. Sowerby);
Typical diameter Lower Chalk; Late
5cm (2in) Cretaceous; UK.
Deshayesites
sinuous ribs
broken end of
living chamber
Deshayesites
Typical diameter forbesi Casey; Early rounded edge
4.5cm (13/4in) Cretaceous; Russia. of venter
HABITAT Nipponites
probably lived as a
planktonic form, drifting
through the mid-level or
upper waters of the warm
apparently irregular
Late Cretaceous seas, and coiling pattern
feeding on small animals
which it caught with Nipponites mirabilis
its tentacles. Typical diameter Yabe; Late Cretaceous;
6cm (21/2in) Japan.
simple
aperture
Typical diameter
14cm (51/2in)
Baculites fragment of
chambered shell
In this Late Cretaceous genus, only the very earliest
part of the shell remained coiled; the latter part complex suture
grew into a straight shaft. Baculites can occur in
vast numbers at some localities, often to the virtual
exclusion of other species, and could grow to over
a metre (39in) in length.
HABITAT The mode of life of these
straight ammonites is controversial; some
palaeontologists believe they lived upright
in the water, with the tentacles on the sea
bed foraging for food, while others think
they had horizontal orientation and lived
closer to the surface of the sea.
traces of suture
living
chamber
Baculites sp.;
Calcaire a Baculites;
Typical length 10cm (4in) Late Cretaceous; France.
Jeletzkytes original
fine ribs tubercles
Jeletzkytes nebraskensis
Typical diameter (Owen); Late Cretaceous;
10cm (4in) USA. body chamber
blunt
Acroteuthis termination
Hibolites jaculoides
Swinnerton; Speeton Clay; bulbous
Early Cretaceous; UK. posterior Typical length 30cm (12in)
Neohibolites chambered
phragmocone
The guard of this small belemnite is slender
and spindle shaped, preserved as translucent,
amber-coloured calcite. It has a deep, rounded
alveolus and an anterior groove. The proostracum
is a tongue-shaped extension at the front of
the phragmocone.
HABITAT Neohibolites lived in
vast numbers, hunting small
prey in the warm shelf seas
of the mid-Cretaceous.
REMARK The separate
chambers of the
phragmocone on this phragmocone sits
specimen are still visible. in the alveolus of
Neohibolites was a very common the guard
fossil in the Albian clays of Europe.
Neohibolites minimus
(Miller); Gault Clay; Typical length
Early Cretaceous; UK. 23cm (9in)
Pachyteuthis
blunt tip
worn surface
of guard
The guard of this large, stout belemnite tapers evenly
to a blunt posterior termination. The broken surface
of the guard displays its fibrous calcite construction.
The rounded alveolus is deep and houses a large
phragmocone, which consists of concavo-convex
chambered
chambers now full of hardened mud.
phragmocone
preserved in
HABITAT Pachyteuthis lived as a predator
iron pyrites
or scavenger in the deeper-water shelf seas
of the Late Jurassic.
REMARK The phragmocone is well
preserved in shiny iron pyrites.
Pachyteuthis
abbreviata (Miller);
Kimmeridge Clay;
Late Jurassic; UK.
V-shaped
alveolus
Typical length 50cm (20in)
HABITAT Belemnitella
swam in the shallower
waters of the Late
Cretaceous Chalk
sea, and used its
hooked tentacles
to catch small prey. deep alveolus
REMARK This is one
of the belemnites which impression of veins
on surface of guard
survived nearly to the end of
the Cretaceous. It occurs in huge
numbers at some localities in
so-called “belemnite graveyards”. point on tip
of guard Typical length 40cm (16in)
Cylindroteuthis
The guard is long and cylindrical, and tapers Cylindroteuthis puzosiana apex of guard
gradually to a posterior point. The chambered (d’Orbigny); Oxford Clay;
phragmocone expands anteriorly.
Late Jurassic; UK.
HABITAT This genus lived as a predator in
the deeper parts of shelf seas.
REMARK This is one of the largest species
of belemnite, growing up to
25cm (10in) in length.
alveolus
of guard
long, cylindrical guard Typical length 25cm (10in)
Acanthoteuthis
antiqua (Pearce);
Oxford Clay;
Late Jurassic; UK.
CRINOIDS
CRINOIDS, POPULARLY known as plates called columnals. At the top of
sea lilies and feather stars, possess the stem is a swollen cup or calyx, to
a massive calcite skeleton, and were which the arms are attached. The arms
so abundant in the Palaeozoic seas are used to filter food from the water.
that their remains formed vast Soon after death, the entire skeleton
thicknesses of limestone. Most crinoids normally falls apart into small, separate
are attached to the sea bed by a flexible plates called ossicles. In contrast,
stem, circular or pentagonal in section, well-preserved crinoids are rare
and made up of numerous disc-like and beautiful fossils.
Scyphocrinites
This large crinoid has a 3m (10ft) long stalk with an ornamented
cup and arms extending a further 30cm (12in). The stem is
circular in cross-section, reducing in diameter away from the
crown and terminating in a large, globular lobolith. This is hollow, feathery arms
divided into compartments and composed of tangled cirri (fine
tendrils) in some species, or small interlocking plates in others. Two cups
HABITAT This would
explain their wide
geographic distribution.
However, recently this
idea has been challenged
by the suggestion that
they lived on the sea
floor and the lobolith
acted as a drag anchor.
REMARK Scyphocrinites
itself is restricted
to Silurian rocks.
This lobolith (right) is a
plate lobolith from the early
Devonian and belongs to a
close relative of Scyphocrinites.
calyx or cup
wall of stem
small plates attachment
Scyphocrinites elegans
(Zekner); Late Silurian;
Morocco. stalk
Cupressocrinites crassus
(Goldfuss); Crinoiden Schichten;
Middle Devonian; Germany. Typical cup diameter
2.5cm (1in)
Cyathocrinites symmetrically
branching arms
large complex
conical cup crown
plated
anal tube Cyathocrinites monile
Salter; Wenlock Limestone;
Typical cup diameter
8mm (5/16in) Middle Silurian; UK.
broken stem
Sagenocrinites
The stem of Sagenocrinites is
cylindrical and composed of short, free
numerous, very thin columnals. arms
Its crown is very broad and
oval in shape. The polygonal broad
plates of the lower arms crown
display clear growth lines
and form part of the cup.
The free parts of the arms arm bases
are short and made up of forming
many small plates. part
of cup
HABITAT The very compact
form of this species suggests
that it had adapted
to relatively turbulent
sea-bed conditions.
stem of very
thin columnals
Sagenocrinites expansus
(Phillips); Wenlock
Typical cup
Limestone; Middle diameter
Silurian; UK. 2.5cm (1in)
HABITAT Crinoidal
limestone forms from the
detritus washed from a reef.
REMARK The black
colour is due to bitumen. large central cavity
curved
surface
between
arms
Crinoidal
limestone
polygonal
plates
stem segments
Saccocoma
globular cup
branched arms
Saccocoma tenella
Typical cup diameter (Goldfuss); Solnhofen Limestone;
2cm (3/4in) Late Jurassic; Germany.
point of
attachment
to root
elongated
base of cup
Torynocrinus canon
(Seeley); Hunstanton
Red Rock; Early Typical cup diameter
Cretaceous; UK. 8mm (5/16in)
Pterocoma
This comatulid or feather scar has
a small cup, which bears ten long,
feather-like arms of equal length.
Each of these has a row of little
branches (pinnules) on either side.
It possessed a stem only in the
earliest stages of development.
long,
HABITAT Pterocoma was a feather-like
free-swimming crinoid, advancing arms
with graceful movements of the
arms, like its living relatives.
REMARK Comatulids are rarely
found as entire specimens.
Pterocoma
pinnata
small, centrally (Schlotheim);
placed cup Solnhofen
Limestone;
Late Jurassic;
Typical cup diameter Germany.
1.5cm (5/8in)
Pentacrinites
This distinctive crinoid has a long, pentagonal stem, with no
root structure at the base. Regularly spaced whorls of fine
branches (cirri) arise from the stem. The cup is small
and inconspicuous. The fan-shaped crown is
pentagonal
made up of multi-branched arms and many stem
small pinnules (branches).
HABITAT Masses of Pentacrinites
are commonly found preserved
under large pieces of fossil
wood, leading to the
belief that it was
pseudopelagic (living
in the open sea), in
colonies attached
to the underside of
floating logs. The
dispersed debris is
locally abundant
around logs and
formed thin sheets
of limestone.
small cup at
base of crown
fan-shaped
crown
Pentacrinites
fossilis Blumenbach;
Lower Lias; Early
Jurassic; UK.
Four
Typical cup diameter Pentacrinites
1.5cm (5/8in)
stem cemented
to sea floor
Marsupites
branching
arms Marsupites
testudinarius
The cup is large and globular, comprising 11
(Schlotheim);
large, thin, polygonal plates, which have a
Upper Chalk; Late
radially arranged ornament. There is no stem,
Cretaceous; UK.
but in its place sits a large pentagonal plate.
The arms are long and very narrow
and branch to give a total of ten.
HABITAT The adult Marsupites nestled
in chalky mud on the sea floor,
and strained food using large cup
its arms. The larval plates
form was planktonic.
REMARK The large,
separate cup plates are
distinctive fossils and
central
are used as zonal markers Typical cup
pentagonal plate,
in western Europe. diameter
without stem
3.5cm (12/5in)
large, globular
cup
Isocrinus columnal
cirrus
attachment scar
Isocrinus
basaltiformis
petaloid
Typical cup diameter (Miller); Early marking
1.5cm (5/8in) Jurassic; UK. ossicle
ECHINOIDS
THE ECHINOIDS possess a rigid, globular articulation of spines, which are
skeleton (test) made up of columns of used for defence and sometimes for
thin, calcite plates (ambulacrals and walking. Regular echinoids, which
interambulacrals). The plates known forage on the sea bed, show radial
as ambulacrals have small pores for symmetry; irregular echinoids,
tube feet. All plates have swollen which usually burrow in soft
tubercles for the ball-and-socket sea beds, show bilateral symmetry.
Archaeocidaris
The large test, which retains many spines on its surface, is crushed
flat. The paired ambulacral columns are narrow, and the broad
interambulacra are made up of four columns of plates, each of
which carries a single, centrally placed tubercle. A long, narrow
spine articulates with each large tubercle. Short spines form a
felt-like covering over much of the test. The teeth and jaws are
present on the underside, but are dissociated.
scattered elements
HABITAT The genus was of jaw system
probably an omnivorous long, narrow
browser, living on the open spine
sea floor, protected by its
long spines.
large tubercle
small, fine
spines
Lower surface
of test
Archaeocidaris whatleyensis
position of Lewis & Ensom; Carboniferous
mouth
Limestone; Early Carboniferous; UK.
ambulacral
Upper surface column
of test
felt-like
covering of
smooth
fine spines
spines
Typical diameter
8cm (3in) position of apical disc
Tylocidaris clavigera
large interambulacral position of (König); Upper Chalk;
Typical diameter 3cm (11/4in) tubercles mouth opening Late Cretaceous; UK.
large primary
spine
Typical diameter
4.5cm (13/4in)
large
Trisalenia tubercle Trisalenia loveni
(Cotteau); Late
The circular flattened test of Cretaceous; Sweden.
Trisalenia is capped by a very large,
flat apical disc made up of two rings
of plates, plus a single central plate
and a hole in which the anus was
situated in life. The large genital large, flat
plates carry pores through which apical disc
eggs and sperm were released. The
off-centre
large interambulacral tubercles
anus
carried smooth, pointed spines.
HABITAT Trisalenia lived among
large granite boulders on the rocky
shoreline that fringed part of southern
Sweden during the Late Cretaceous.
REMARK The family Saleniidae occurs
commonly in marine Cretaceous sediments.
Hemicidaris
long, tapering, large tubercles
smooth spines
apical disc
Hemicidaris intermedia
smaller, short (Fleming); Coralline
spines
Typical diameter 3cm (11/4in) Limestone; Late Jurassic; UK.
Phymosoma
chalk matrix
numerous
smooth spines
The test is circular and
flattened. The areas occupied
by both the apical disc and the
membrane around the mouth
are very broad. The ambulacral
and interambulacral tubercles
are about the same size, and
in life bore tapering, smooth,
cylindrical or flattened
spines. Isolated spines
are common Chalk fossils.
HABITAT Phymosoma lived
on the Chalk sea floor,
grazing on hard surfaces
to obtain algae, sponges,
and other soft organisms.
Phymosoma koenigi
test with many (Mantell); Upper Chalk;
tubercles
Typical diameter 3cm (11/4in) Late Cretaceous; UK.
Coleopleurus
apical disc genital
pores
Conulus albogalerus
Leske; Upper Chalk; hole
Late Cretaceous; UK. enclosing
mouth
hole enclosing
anus
Typical diameter Basal view
3.5cm (13/8 in)
Clypeaster aegyptiacus
Clypeaster Michelin; Miocene;
The large, thick test of Clypeaster has a rounded, Saudi Arabia.
pentagonal outline, and a low, conical profile. On
the upper surface the ambulacra are expanded
to form distinctive petals which carry
many elongated pores. The small,
circular mouth is surrounded by
jaws, and lies at the centre of the
depressed base. The anus also
lies on the lower surface near
the posterior. The surface
of the test is covered with
small tubercles which, in
life, bear short spines.
The sand dollar, Encope, is very flat and thin five petals
in profile. The five petals are well developed
but smaller than in Clypeaster (see
opposite). Each of the five ambulacra
is perforated by an oval hole
(a lunule) near the margin, which
passes right through the test. A
single, larger sixth hole is present
in the posterior ambulacrum.
Encope micropora
Typical diameter
Agassiz; Recent; Peru.
9cm (31/2in) very flat test lunule
Heliophora orbiculus
four genital
Typical diameter (Linnaeus); Late Miocene; pores
3.5cm (13/8in) Morocco.
broad,
Hardouinia short petals
well-defined
plating
The large test of Hardouinia is conical in profile
with a flat base. The petals, which in life bore
tube feet specialized for respiration, are
short and broad, and very conspicuous.
The interambulacral plates are low and
broad. The mouth lies centrally on the
lower surface and has five prominent
projections, giving it a stellate outline.
The anus is inset on the posterior
side of the upper test. The surface
originally carried short, fine spines.
HABITAT This genus lived partially buried
in sandy sediment, into which it burrowed
with the aid of the short spines. lt
swallowed the sand that it lived in
to obtain nourishment.
REMARK Hardouinia is common
in sandy limestone faces, in the
eastern USA. Juvenile specimens
are much less conical in shape. position of Hardouinia mortonis
Typical diameter anus (Michelin); Peedee Formation;
3.5cm (11 ⁄ 3in) Late Cretaceous; USA.
Echinocorys scutata
Leske; Upper Chalk;
Typical diameter 7cm (23 ⁄4in) Late Cretaceous; UK. anterior end
Hemiaster batnensis
Coquand; Fahdene
Formation; Late
Cretaceous; Tunisia.
Typical diameter
4cm (11 ⁄ 2in) anterior notch of test fine tubercles
Linthia sudanensis
Bather; Kalanbaina
Formation; Early
Paleocene; Republic
of Niger.
Typical diameter genital pores
7cm (23 ⁄4in) strong anterior notch in disc
well-developed
petals
clay matrix
pores of
respiratory
tube feet
Schizaster branderianus
Forbes; Barton Beds; large anterior Typical diameter
Middle Eocene; UK. petal 2.5cm (1in)
large anterior
tubercles notch
flat
base
Lovenia forbesi
(Woods); Morgan
Limestone; Miocene; anterior
Typical diameter
Australia. 2.5cm (1in)
ASTEROIDS
THE ASTEROIDS, which include many five ambulacral grooves, floored by
of the species popularly called starfish, ambulacral and adambulacral ossicles, run
are common marine animals and have along the midline of each arm. The grooves
a long history extending back into the house the soft, muscular tube feet, which
Ordovician. Most have five arms, although are used for walking, burrowing, and
some species have more. The mouth is manipulating prey. Asteroids are rarely
centrally placed on the underside, and preserved as complete specimens.
Pentasteria Pentasteria
cotteswoldiae
The five arms are quite narrow and the (Buckman);
disc is small. Large marginal ossicles Stonesfield Slate;
form a broad, well-defined border Middle Jurassic;
to the asteroid. The upper surface of UK.
the disc is occupied by small
plates, through which the
large mouth ossicles can
be clearly seen.
Metopaster
pentagonal
form
small
The arms are very short and the disc is large ossicles
(the body resembles a pentagonal biscuit). The
marginal ossicles are large, few in number, and
conspicuous; in life they bore small, granular
spines. The marginals, which form the tips of
the arms, are elongated and triangular.
The disc was covered with small,
polygonal ossicles.
HABITAT Like its living relatives,
Metopaster probably lived as a sediment
feeder or scavenger on the Chalk sea floor.
REMARK Marginal ossicles of this genus
are common fossils.
Metopaster
parkinsoni
(Forbes); Upper Chalk;
Late Cretaceous; UK. large marginal
ossicles form
Typical diameter broad border
5cm (2in)
long,
narrow
arms
soft chalk
matrix
marginals overlap
to increase
flexibility
Typical diameter
10cm (4in) disc made of large ossicles
OPHIUROIDS
THE OPHIUROIDS ARE commonly asteroids. They consist of a central
called starfish or brittle stars. Closely column of vertebrae, covered by
related to echinoids they possess five four rows of plates. The ambulacral
long, often fragile, arms which radiate groove is covered in ophiuroids. Today,
from a flat, nearly circular disc. These ophiuroids occur in vast masses on
arms are very flexible, and quite the sea floor; similar quantities are
different in structure from those of found in the fossil state.
Palaeocoma
egertoni (Broderip);
Typical disc Middle Lias; Early
diameter 2cm (3 ⁄4in) Jurassic; UK.
Geocoma
The disc is small and nearly
circular, the arms long and long, highly
flexible arms
broad at the base. The upper
surface of the disc is made small, rounded
central disc
up of a fairly small number
of large plates. The lateral fine limestone
plates of the arms bear matrix
short, fine spines; the
upper side arm plates Geocoma
are very small. carinata
(Munster);
HABITAT Geocoma Solnhofen
lived in lime-mud. Limestone;
Typical disc diameter Late Jurassic;
2cm (3 ⁄4in) Germany.
BLASTOIDS
THE BLASTOIDS ARE a small, well- and deltoids. The five columns of
defined group of echinoderms, which ambulacral plates are V-shaped,
in life were attached to the substrate bearing short brachioles used for
by a thin stem, and in which the filtering food from the water. These
compact theca is shaped like a rosebud. fossils are locally common from the
The theca is made up of three circles of Silurian to the Permian, in marine
five plates, known as basals, radials, shales and limestones.
Pentremites openings on
top of theca
Deltoblastus Deltoblastus
permicus
The theca is conical and tall, and the five (Wanner); Permian;
large ambulacra are sunken into its surface.
Indonesia.
Between the ambulacra, the five areas
made of large plates have a groove
along the midline.
HABITAT This genus was attached
to hard substrates on the sea bed.
REMARK Blastoids occur in
V-shaped
abundance in the Permian
regions
of Timor in Indonesia, but between
in the rest of the world ambulacra
they all but vanished in
large, broad Typical cup diameter
the Late Carboniferous. ambulacral areas 1.5cm (3/8in)
CYSTOIDS
CYSTOIDS SUPERFICIALLY resembled of short, unbranched limbs called
crinoids in that they were attached to brachioles. In addition, they had
the substrate by a stem, and possessed distinctive triangular pore structures on
a swollen theca made up of a variable the plates, which were thought to have
number of plates. Cystoids, however, been used for respiration. Cystoids are
did not have true arms. Instead they found, very occasionally, in Middle
filtered food from the water by means Ordovician to Devonian rocks.
Pleurocystites filitextus
Pleurocystites Billings; Trenton Limestone;
This well-preserved specimen displays very Ordovician; Canada.
clearly the large plates on the upper surface
of the theca, and the rather short, rapidly
tapering, coiled stem. The stem is broad
and flexible close to the theca and
composed of alternately large
and small ossicles. Two long
brachioles extend on either side
of the centrally placed mouth.
HABITAT Pleurocystites was a
benthonic, filter-feeding organism. position of
mouth
Lepadocrinites
quadrifasciatus
Pearce; Wenlock
Limestone; Silurian; UK.
long, tapering
stem
originally attached Typical cup diameter
by root 2.5cm (1in)
CARPOIDS
THE CARPOIDS, also known as They were probably ancestral to the
Homalozoa, are a small but diverse group echinoderms, but not to the chordates
of invertebrates ranging from Cambrian as was once thought. Carpoids were free
to the Devonian. They possessed a fragile living, being able to move on the sea bed,
skeleton with the distinctive fine calcite and had a large head and a short, flexible
structure of echinoderms, but without tail. Gill slits (like those in fish) are
a trace of their five-fold symmetry. conspicuous in some carpoid genera.
HABITAT Cothurnocystis
lived on the sea floor, and
was probably able to pull short, flexible tail
itself along with its tail. Typical cup
diameter 5cm (2in)
Placocystites
Placocystites forbesianus
The head of this mitrate is flattened and De Koninck;
rectangular in shape. It is made up of large, Wenlock
thin, calcite plates, which bear fine, wavy Limestone;
ridges. The anterior end has two rod-like Silurian; UK.
appendages which are, in fact, spines.
spines on
The mouth is placed centrally. anterior end
HABITAT Placocystites
lived on the surface of head made up
the sea bed, and used its of thin plates
flexible tail as a lever to
wavy ridges
haul itself about. on surface
REMARK The tail is
missing in this specimen.
VERTEBRATES
AGNATHANS
THESE EARLY, jawless fishes have an no paired fins. Most of the extinct forms
ancient lineage, represented today by the were tadpole-shaped, swam by undulating
lampreys and hagfishes. Living forms have their tails, and had thick plates and scales
funnel-like, suctional mouths with rasping, for armour. They first appeared in marine
horny teeth, used for scraping flesh. Unlike waters, then spread to fresh and brackish
jawed vertebrates, agnathan gills face waters, dominating the Silurian and
inwards from the gill arches. They have Devonian periods.
Pteraspis long
Pteraspis rostrata
Agassiz; Old Red
rostrum
The flattened head region of Sandstone; Devonian; UK.
Pteraspis was enclosed by massive,
bony plates, which may have been
formed by scales fusing together. Head shield
It had one middle dorsal plate,
one rostral plate, and one ventral
plate, plus a smaller lateral series.
The plates were punctuated growth lines
dorsal
spine base
notch
Birkenia
The spindle-shaped body of this small fish is armoured Birkenia elegans
by deep, overlapping, articulated scales arranged in Traquair; Slot Burn
rows. A row of ridge scales runs along the top. The Formation; Middle
terminal mouth forms a vertical slit, surrounded by long, spindle- Silurian; UK.
the smaller, less organized cranial scales. shaped body
terminal mouth
PLACODERMS
THE PLACODERMS FORMED a of the body and tail was covered by
diverse group of now-extinct fishes small scales. The moderate-to-large
that had simple jaws armed with eyes were protected by a circlet of
slicing plates. Typically, these fish lived bony plates. Placoderms lived in marine
on the sea bed. They had a heavily and fresh water, from the Late Silurian
armoured head shield connected to the Early Carboniferous. Most were
to a trunk shield, which covered the moderately sized, but some grew to
anterior part of the body. The rest 6m (20ft) in length.
Bothriolepis
This armoured fish had two dorsal and pelvic fins, and a Bothriolepis canadensis
heterocercal tail. Its semicircular head shield and massive Whiteaves; Escuminac Formation;
trunk shield were flattened from top to bottom. Pectoral Late Devonian; Canada.
appendages, more extended than those of
Pterichthyodes, were probably used for common eye sockets
balancing the body on the substrate.
Paired sacs inside the trunk shield semicircular head
may have functioned as lungs shield
when freshwater lakes dried long pectoral
up. Soft part preservation appendage
indicates the presence of
a spiral intestinal valve, like
that of sharks.
HABITAT Bothriolepis
was principally a freshwater
bottom-feeder but its
fossil remains have been
found in estuarine and
marine deposits.
REMARK Species of
Bothriolepis have been
described from every
continent including
Antarctica. Its success can
be attributed to its heavy
protective armour and its
ability to adapt to a wide
range of environments.
Body
shield
bony trunk
shield
Typical length 40cm (16in)
Coccosteus cuspidatus
Miller; Old Red Sandstone;
Devonian; UK.
joint with
Typical length 35cm (14in) trunk
articulated
This small fish had a pair of armoured and appendage
jointed appendages, articulated with the
trunk, which may have been used for
bottom crawling. The relatively small
head was enclosed in a bony shield,
with eyes on the top and jaws on the
underside which may have been used
as shovels. The massive trunk shield,
with its flat undersurface, is covered
with overlapping bony plates.
HABITAT Pterichthyodes was a bottom feeder
that lived in shallow freshwater lakes.
REMARK The name Pterichthyodes, “winged fish” massive trunk
refers to its large wing-like pectoral appendages. It shield
was originally thought that they could be used to
Pterichthyodes
“walk” on land, an interpretation now discounted.
milleri (Agassiz);
Old Red
Body
Sandstone;
shield
Devonian; UK.
Typical length
15cm (6in)
CHONDRICHTHYANS
CREATURES OF THIS CLASS are continuously replaced from behind,
characterized by a cartilaginous being shed from the jaw margin or lost
skeleton made up of tiny, calcified during feeding. Trace fossils (see p.42)
prisms. Living examples include the ascribed to the group include spirally
sharks, skates, rays, and rabbitfishes. coiled faecal remains and intestines.
Cartilage is not usually preserved, so Chondrichthyans diversified from
common fossils tend to be teeth, scales, Devonian origins to become very
and dorsal-fin spines. Sharks’ teeth are common in today’s seas.
Petalodus Petalodus
acuminatus
The anterior teeth of this predator have Agassiz; Yoredale
a symmetrical, triangular crown, with a Beds; Early
moderately high central cusp and Carboniferous; UK.
pronounced cutting edge. Lateral teeth
are shorter and less symmetrical. broadly triangular
crown
HABITAT Petalodus probably Anterior
inhabited coral reefs. tooth constricted crown/
root junction
deep root
Typical length 3.5m (111 ⁄ 2ft)
Helicoprion
Helicoprion
small, juvenile teeth bessonowi
The front teeth of Helicoprion grew in a spiral Karpinsky; Early
containing up to 180 teeth, and unlike most Permian; Russia.
sharks it retained its teeth even after
growing new ones. The older teeth
were housed in a cavity at the junction
of the lower jaws. Individual teeth
consist of upright, triangular crowns
over a projecting root. Tooth
HABITAT Helicoprion was probably spiral
a mid-water marine predator.
Estimated length
5.5m (18ft) large, mature teeth
unornamented
inserted
portion
Dentition
radiating
ridges
crowns of
lateral teeth
small posterior
teeth Typical length 2.7m (9ft)
meeting-point teeth of
Palidiplospinax of lower jaws lower jaw
HABITAT Palidiplospinax
lived in shallow, marine
environments, feeding on
small fish and thin-shelled,
bottom-dwelling invertebrates.
dorsal-fin
spine
Palidiplospinax
enniskilleni (Duffin
and Ward); Lower Lias;
Early Jurassic; UK.
displaced
vertebral centra
Partial skeleton
Ptychodus Iatissimus
Ptychodus massive, rectangular,
enamelled crown Agassiz; Upper Chalk;
This moderately large shark is known only from Late Cretaceous; UK.
fossils of its shell-crushing teeth, and possibly
from calcified vertebrae. The teeth were
arranged in a tightly packed battery,
with massive rectangular crowns
traversed by sharp, coarse ridges,
giving way to round projections at
the tooth margin. The square root,
directly underneath the crown,
was perforated by tiny, closely
packed blood vessels.
HABITAT Ptychodus lived in shallow
marine conditions, preying on
thick-shelled invertebrates.
Single
tooth
Squalicorax polished
enamel finely serrated
Like the modern tiger shark, Squalicorax cutting edge
had triangular, flattened teeth, with finely
serrated crowns. In anterior files the teeth
are upright, but become increasingly inclined
towards the back. The simple flat root lacks
a nutritive groove.
HABITAT This shark usually inhabited
shallow marine waters.
Squalicorax pristodontus
(Agassiz); Phosphate
Formation; Late
Cretaceous; Morocco.
Striatolamia
root nutritive groove
junction of root
and crown
root
Juvenile
Carcharodon upper tooth Carcharodon
The teeth have large triangular crowns and hastalis
flattened roots. Younger individuals have (Agassiz); Late
narrower teeth and often possess a pair of Miocene; Chile.
vestigial lateral cusps. The more recent species
have evolved serrated crowns. Upper teeth are Juvenile
wider, and the more lateral teeth point backward. lower
Lower teeth are smaller and almost symmetrical. tooth
HABITAT Modern Great white sharks are partially vestigial
lateral cusp
warm-blooded and prefer temperate rather than
tropical waters. They hunt mainly inshore, living First upper Second upper
near the surface and feeding on marine mammals anterior tooth anterior tooth
such as seals and dolphins.
REMARK The Carcharodon lineage first arose
from Mako shark-like ancestors in the Oligocene
with Carcharodon hastalis. In the Late Miocene of
the eastern Pacific, a lightly serrated species, called
C. hubbelli evolved, which gave rise to the modern
Great white shark. Meanwhile, in the Atlantic Ocean, Labial
an unserrated species with wide tooth evolved,
(outside
known as C. plicatilis. This became extinct in Late
facing)
Pliocene times and was replaced globally by the
Great white shark, C. carcharias, which lives to this views Second lower
day, although endangered. anterior tooth
Carcharodon hastalis
First upper Second upper (Agassiz); Early Miocene; USA.
anterior tooth anterior tooth
Upper tooth
Carcharodon
hubbelli
(Ehret et al.);
Late Miocene;
Chile.
Lower
tooth
unserrated
cutting edge Carcharodon
Second lower Upper carcharias
anterior tooth tooth (Linnaeus);
Carcharodon plicatilis Early
(Agassiz); Early Pliocene; USA. Pliocene;
Chile.
serrated
cutting
edge
Upper
tooth
irregularly
serrated
even lateral cusp
serrations
finely serrated
Otodus auriculatus crown tip
Typical length
Eocene 5m (16ft) (Blainville); Aday Formation;
Pliocene 16m (52ft) Middle Eocene; Kazakhstan.
Upper tooth
Upper tooth
lingual view
irregular
no serrations
lateral
cusp evenly
serrated
wide crown tip
crown
neck
Otodus sokolowi (Jaekel);
Birket Qarun Formation;
even
serrations Late Eocene; Egypt.
evenly serrated
lateral cusp
Lower
tooth
Otodus angustidens
(Agassiz); Early
Oligocene; USA.
chipped crown
tip “ding”
Juvenile
reduced lower
lateral cusp
reduced tooth
lateral cusp
Galeocerdo principal
The tooth of this shark consists of a crown cusp
blade
with a finely serrated cusp and more
coarsely serrated blade. The root bears
a shallow groove and several vascular
openings (foraminae).
serrated
HABITAT This genus inhabits cutting
coastal waters. edge
Galeocerdo cuvier
(Peron & LeSueur);
Yorktown Formation;
Early Pliocene; USA.
Hemipristis
The upper teeth of this shark are triangular, with serrated Hemipristis serra Agassiz;
cutting edges. The symphyseal tooth (closest to the lower Pungo River Formation;
jaw junction) is almost symmetrical, whilst side teeth Middle Miocene; USA.
become increasingly
inclined away from the Upper teeth
centre. Lower teeth are
Reconstructed dentition
slimmer, with V-shaped
roots. The symphyseal
tooth has few serrations,
but lateral teeth become
progressively serrated
and broad. symphyseal
tooth posterior
two antero-
HABITAT Hemipristis lived tooth
lateral teeth
in warm coastal waters.
REMARK Many fossil sharks, Lower teeth
like Hemipristis, have differing
upper and lower teeth.
Ischyrhiza cap
Now extinct, Ischyrhiza was a genus of saw shark
with small oral teeth and large teeth on the rostrum
surface polished posterior
(snout). The cap (crown) of the rostral teeth is by wear cutting edge
extended, flattened, and pointed, with cutting
edges front and back. At the base of the posterior
anterior
cutting edge is a small bulge. The root has a folded cutting edge
upper and lower surface and a divided base.
HABITAT An inhabitant of inshore waters, this
genus could tolerate a range of salinities.
REMARK Ischyrhiza used its toothed rostrum to bulge
comb food – probably worms and crustaceans – at cap
base
from the sediment, and perhaps for defence.
Typical length
1.5m (5ft) large middle file
Heliobatis
Heliobatis was a stingray with a rounded disc, pointed snout,
and long, barbed tail. A series of hooked, dermal denticles ran
rounded,
along the dorsal midline. The whip-like tail was armed with disc-like body
up to three barbed spines. The 90 pectoral-fin rays
almost met in front of the skull, with the pointed snout
16 pelvic-fin rays completing
the circle behind. The teeth
pectoral fin
were small and tetrahedral,
with a relatively flat
occlusal surface. Males
had a pair of pelvic
claspers. The tail
consisted of between
170 and 190 fully
calcified vertebrae.
HABITAT Living in
freshwater streams
and lakes, this stingray
probably fed on
cray fish, prawns, and
other invertebrates.
REMARK When not
feeding, Heliobatis would
lie partially buried in soft
sediment. The poisonous
tail spines could inflict
serious injury to any
potential predator.
Heliobatis radians
pelvic girdle
Marsh; Green
River Formation;
Early Eocene; USA. pelvic claspers (male)
tail vertebrae
tail spine
Sandalodus Sandalodus
morrisii
Although known only from isolated Davis;
tooth plates, this fish is believed to Carboniferous
have reached up to 2m (6½ft) in Limestone; Early
length. The lower teeth are curved Carboniferous;
strongly inwards; the upper teeth are UK.
extended triangles in outline, with
pointed anterior ends, and broad,
rounded posterior ends. The biting Upper
surface is traversed by longitudinal tooth plate
ridges, giving the upper surface of
the plate an undulating cross-
section. Vertical pillars of hard
dentine rise from the tooth
plate surface.
grinding surface
HABITAT Sandalodus used its teeth to
crush thick-shelled invertebrates – and
perhaps corals – in warm, shallow,
shelf seas.
posterior
Edaphodon bucklandi
Agassiz; Bracklesham
Beds; Middle Eocene; UK.
ACANTHODIANS
THESE FISHES WERE among the provided considerable thrust when
earliest known gnathostomes, and swimming, and all paired and median
flourished in the Devonian. They fins (except the tail) had strong,
varied in size from 10cm (4in) to over immovable spines on their leading
2m (6½ft), and were active swimmers edges. The gills were covered by a
with long, tapered bodies protected large scale (operculum), and the
by scales. A strongly heterocercal tail teeth often developed in whorls.
Diplacanthus Diplacanthus
The moderately deep body of this genus sp.; Lower Old
narrows at the back into a powerful tail. Red Sandstone;
The two dorsal fins and pectoral fins Devonian; UK.
are supported by spines. Two pairs
of intermediate spines lie along the pectoral-fin
spine
underside of the body.
HABITAT Diplacanthus lived
dorsal spine
in shallow lakes.
tail
Typical length
10cm (4in)
Cheiracanthus scale-covered
Cheiracanthus sp.; Middle
Old Red Sandstone;
body Devonian; UK.
This moderate-sized acanthodian has a robust
and fairly deep body, with large eyes placed well
forward on the sides, and a heterocercal tail. It nodule
has single dorsal and anal fins, and paired
pectoral and pelvic fins, all protected by
spines. Paired intermediate spines
were lacking. The scales were
small and ornamented.
HABITAT With its gaping jaws, this
was an efficient mid-level and
surface filter feeder in fresh water.
Typical cup
diameter ventral
30cm (12in) tail intermediate spines jaw
OSTEICHTHYANS
FISH BELONGING TO this class are which were supported by a single bone
characterized by a bony internal at the base. Actinopterygians (Devonian
skeleton. Two subgroups can be to Recent) are very diverse, and include
identified by their fin structure: the the majority of present-day marine and
actinopterygians had fins supported freshwater fishes. The sarcopterygians
by bony rods (radials), while the dominated during the Devonian and
sarcopterygians had fleshy fins, include the lungfish and coelacanths.
Ceratodus tiguidensis
Tabaste; lhrazer Shale;
Middle Jurassic; Lower
Typical length 50cm (20in) Republic of Niger. margin plates
Upper jaw
Lepidotes rows of
Lepidotes sp.; Oxford
Clay; Late Jurassic; UK.
This fossil fish is rarely found as a whole fish; rhomboidal
usually just isolated scales and bony plates are scales
preserved. The skull bones were ornamented
with knob-like projections, a massive
operculum covered the gills,
and the mouth was armed
with hemispherical, crushing
teeth. The moderately deep
body was protected by shiny,
thickly enamelled scales,
arranged in longitudinal rows.
HABITAT Lepidotes fed on
thick-shelled, bottom-dwelling
invertebrates in shallow marine
seas, lagoons, and freshwater lakes.
enamel-covered
Fragment of flank outer surface
Typical length 1.7m (51 ⁄ 2ft)
Gyrodus cuvieri
outer margin Agassiz;
Kimmeridge Clay;
Late Jurassic; UK.
Typical length 30cm (1ft)
deep, rectangular
body scales Partial skull
Pachycormus Pachycormus
This large fish had a powerfully built body and deeply
macropterus (Blainville);
notched, homocercal tail. The pelvic fins were much
Early Jurassic; France.
reduced, while the scythe-like pectoral fins
were greatly elongated.
skull-roof
HABITAT This fast, open-water bones
predator inhabited shallow
marine waters.
REMARK This specimen
is preserved three
dimensionally in a
calcareous nodule.
teeth
Sperata
This fossil catfish is only known from its skull. It is likely that it Sperata aor
had a fairly long body with a forked tail, a moderately long anal (Bucanon); Early
fin well separated from the tail, and a front dorsal fin supported Pliocene; India.
by a long, spiny ray. A second dorsal fin (the adipose fin)
consisted of an unsupported flap of fatty tissue. The body skull roof
had no scales. The palate
and both jaws carried Skull
teeth. Elongate, tactile
sense organs called
barbels originated on
the upper jaw.
HABITAT This
bottom-dwelling
fish preyed on
invertebrates.
snout
region
eye socket
eye socket
pointed skull
rostrum
pectoral fin
lower
robust, jaw
Typical length 50cm (20in) upright tooth
Phyllodus Upper
This fish is known primarily from its convex tooth pharyngeal
plates. The oval central teeth are the largest, and are tooth plate
organized into a rough, longitudinal row, in the
middle. These are flanked by long, slightly
smaller crowns, giving way at the sides to
almost concentric rows of smaller, near-
circular teeth, and occasional ovoid teeth.
HABITAT Phyllodus probably fed on thick-
shelled, bottom-dwelling marine invertebrates,
small
such as molluscs. As the fossil fish is also found marginal
in lagoonal and brackish deposits, it is believed teeth
that it may have been able to tolerate salinity.
REMARK The affinities of the genus to other
genera are uncertain.
Phyllodus
laterally
toliapicus Agassiz; expanded
Blackheath Beds; central teeth
Early Eocene; UK.
Estimated length 40cm (16in)
anal fin
bony
short skull vertebral column Typical length 70cm (28in)
Rhacolepis
The body is spindle-shaped, covered with small rhomboidal Rhacolepis buccalis
scales. The skull is pointed. The lower jaw is long and Agassiz; Santana Formation;
upwardly inclined with a single row of small teeth. Early Cretaceous; Brazil.
HABITAT Rhacolepis lived in shallow tail
marine conditions. It is commonly
found in calcareous
(limestone) nodules,
preserved in three
dimensions.
Diplomystus deeply
Diplomystus has a moderately deep body, a homocercal tail, notched,
symmetrical
single dorsal and anal fins, and a pelvic fin sited directly tail
beneath the dorsal fin. The scales are thin and ovoid. The
strongly upturned mouth is typical of a surface-water feeder.
HABITAT Diplomystus was a common
inhabitant of some North American
Eocene lakes.
REMARK Some specimens have
smaller fishes preserved in their
mouths or intestines.
Diplomystus
dentatus Cope;
Green River
upturned anal fin
mouth Formation; Early
Eocene; USA.
vertebral column
gut contents
Leuciscus
This dace has a small, but extended, body, small fins, relatively large Leuciscus pachecoi
scales and a forked tail. It is a specialized herbivore with toothless Gomez; Miocene;
jaws. The front vertebrae and ribs (known as the Weberian ossicles) Spain.
are movable and, by transmitting vibrations from the swim bladder
to the inner ear, improve sensitivity to high frequency sound. When
injured, modern species of Leuciscus release a chemical from
small but
epidermal alarm cells, eliciting a fright reaction in related extended
fish, causing them to scatter and swim to the bottom. body
forked
tail
head
fine-grained
freshwater marl
fine vertebral
column
Centroberyx eocenicus
Typical length typical orange (Frost); London Clay;
60cm (24in) colour Early Eocene; UK.
Hoplopteryx Hoplopteryx
Hoplopteryx has a dorsal fin supported by nine unjointed,
lewesiensis
bony fin rays, a deeply forked, homocercal tail, fin rays (Mantell); Lower
a moderately developed anal fin, and a pelvic
Chalk; Late
fin located well forward. The snout is
Cretaceous; UK.
quite short, the eyes fairly large,
and both jaws of the upturned
mouth hold small teeth.
HABITAT This
was a marine fish,
living in shallow
chalk seas.
vertebral
column
eye socket
bones small
covering gills pectoral fin Typical length
27cm (101 ⁄ 2in)
unforked
tail fin
Typical length
15cm (6in) lower jaw
Wetherellus Wetherellus
Although known from the cranial skeleton only, this marine cristatus Casier;
perch is thought to have been around 25cm (10in) long. Its eye socket London Clay; Early
moderately large eye, containing sclerotic plates, Eocene; UK.
is centrally placed in the shallow skull. sclerotic ring
The jaws are armed with a row of
upper
upright, pointed teeth, flanked jaw
by a smaller, marginal series.
TETRAPODS
AMPHIBIANS WERE THE first tetrapods to two major pathways. One led to the
colonize the land, over 400 million years lissamphibians, frogs, salamanders, and
ago. Although they were able to live on caecilians. The second pathway gave rise
land, their eggs were laid in water, hence to reptiles, which developed a waterproof
they were only semi-terrestrial. From the egg, allowing them to breed on land and
Late Carboniferous period onwards the so become completely terrestrial, unlike
evolution of fossil amphibians followed today’s semi-terrestrial amphibians.
Megalocephalus
Megalocephalus eye socket
pachycephalus (Barkas);
Coal Measures; Late
This early tetrapod is known only from Carboniferous; UK.
its crocodile-like skull. Its eye sockets were
anteriorly enlarged into a keyhole shape.
HABITAT This amphibian was a major
predator in Late Carboniferous swamps.
Diplocaulus
magnicornis Cope;
horn tip Red beds; Early
Typical length
1m (39in) Permian; USA.
tail fin
Aphaneramma
rounded snout tip
eye socket
striated bone
ornament
Typical length 2m (6 ⁄ 2ft)
1
Batrachosuchus nostrils
Batrachosuchus pit
watsoni Haughton; and ridge
ornament
Typical length Karroo Beds; Early
50cm (20in) Triassic; South Africa.
Andrias Andrias
scheuchzeri
This is the largest salamander, up to 2.3m (71⁄2ft) long. The (Holl); Late
skull is short, broad, and massive in adults. There are four Miocene;
fingers, five toes, and a short tail. Germany.
HABITAT Modern species of Andrias short,
live in rivers and large streams, never broad
skull
leaving the water; fossil species
probably lived the
same way.
tail
four-fingered hand
straight ribs
disarticulated
foot hind limb
Typical length
2m (61 ⁄ 2ft)
Archeria
These slender, long-bodied swimmers grew up to about 2m (61⁄2ft) Archeria crassidisca
long. The skull is high posteriorly, with a small horn above a deep (Cope); Red beds; Early
cheek notch. The snout is depressed and spatulate. At least 40 Permian; USA.
small chisel-shaped teeth on each side of the jaw gave a long
biting-edge like a hacksaw blade. spatulate snout
large teeth
at snout tip
eye socket
Typical length
cheek notch small, chisel-like teeth 2m (61 ⁄ 2ft)
LISSAMPHIBIANS
LISSAMPHIBIANS are a group of smooth-skinned, non-amniote tetrapods that
include the frogs and toads, salamanders and newts, the limbless caecilians as well as
the extinct salamander-like albanerpetontids.
Rana pueyoi
large
Navas; Red shales; foot
Oligocene; Spain.
Typical length
9cm (31 ⁄ 2in)
AMNIOTES REPTILES
AMNIOTES are a successful and diverse THE CLASS REPTILA is divided into
group of tetrapods. They share the three subclasses (the Anapsida,
possession of an amniotic egg, which Diapsida, and Synapsida) according to
freed them from a dependence on the number of openings in the skull
water for reproduction. There are two roof and the configuration of the skull
major amniote lineages: the Synapsids bones behind the eye sockets. The
(mammals and their extinct close early forms were generally small lizard-
relatives) and the Reptiles (including like creatures. However, they gave rise
the dinousaurs and birds). to the dinosaurs and birds.
left leg
large eye socket
nostril
teeth hindlimb
lower jaw girdle
Hind limbs
Typical length
33cm (13in)
right foot
Elginia mirabilis
Newton; Elgin Sandstone;
Typical length 1.5m (5ft) Late Permian; UK. eye sockets nostril
Stereosternum
The aquatic preference of this anapsid is evident in the long,
needle-like teeth, the elongated head and body which contain head
ten neck vertebrae, and the short limbs and flattened tail.
HABITAT It has been suggested that the fine teeth
long, fine teeth of this small carnivore
combined to act as a sieve,
enabling it to filter out neck
the small, swimming
crustaceans abundant in
its marine environment. ribs
tail
upper
Stereosternum arm bone
tumidum Cope;
Early Permian; Brazil.
short limbs
Typical length
30cm (12in)
Homeosaurus
A small, lizard-like reptile, Homeosaurus resembles the last
surviving member of its order – the tuatara of New Zealand –
in many details. The group to which it belongs differs from the
lizards by having skulls with
a rigid articulation bone
(quadrate). Also
characteristic is the
attachment of the few
skull
marginal teeth, which
are firmly fused to the
edge of the jaws. These
were not replaced
when worn, but were
added at the rear as
growth continued.
Further teeth are present
in the palate, and the snout
is turned down to produce
a chisel-like cutting edge.
upper
leg bone
Homeosaurus maximiliani
Meyer; Solnhofen
Limestone; Late Jurassic;
Germany.
tail
foot
Kuehneosuchus three
vertebrae
Kuehneosuchus latissimus
Robinson; Fissure fill; Late
This primitive, gliding, lizard-like Triassic; UK.
diapsid had very long, fixed ribs, giving
a “wing-span” of about 30cm (12in).
It is thought that these ribs were
attached to each other by tissue,
thus forming a continuous
membrane, which would have
acted as a gliding surface, long,
reminiscent of present-day hollow
“flying lizards” such as Draco. rib
rib
upper thigh
bone
fragments
Typical “wing-span”
30cm (12in)
Listromycter
leakeyi Charig
& Gans;
Rusinga Beds;
Early Miocene; median tooth
Kenya. Underside
Typical length 30m (12in) of skull
Vertebra
rear front
Typical length 6m (20ft) articulation boss articulation socket
replacement
tooth
Quadrate radius
bone
Forelimb bones
flattened
skull
tooth sockets
Skull and lower jaws
Typical length 3m (10ft)
lower jaw
articulation
Palatal view
of skull
Typical length 2m (61 ⁄ 2ft) large crushing tooth
Mixosaurus tail
nostril
Ichthyosaurus Ichthyosaurus
Typical ichthyosaur features are: numerous teeth set in a groove within communis Conybeare;
the long jaws; each eye held in a ring of bony plates; the reduction Lower Lias; Early
of the pelvic girdle components and associated paddle; a tail kinked Jurassic; UK.
downwards to support a lower tail lobe; and subdivided finger rows.
HABITAT The ring of strengthening bones around an
ichthyosaur’s eye indicates it was capable of diving to
considerable depths in pursuit of fish.
jaws
teeth
Skull
nostril ring of
bony plates
Typical length 2m (61 ⁄ 2ft)
Platypterygius
Platypterygius australis
neural arch
(McCoy); Toolebuc Limestone; attachment
Platypterygius had a heavy beaked, multi- Early Cretaceous; Australia.
toothed head, and paddle-like forelimbs
with eight to nine digital rows. As in all
ichthyosaurs, the vertebral centra are short
and biconcave, with no fusion of the
neural arch, which has no transverse
processes. The double-headed rib
articulates via two indistinct bosses
on the centrum.
rounded
finger bones
Right
forepaddle
modified lower
arm bones
lower
rows of jaw
teeth
Basal view
of skull
Hyperodapedon
gordoni Huxley;
Elgin Sandstone;
Late Triassic; UK.
Typical length
2m (61 ⁄ 2ft)
Pelusios anterior
HABITAT All
pelomedusids
appear to have
been semi-aquatic
omnivores. Living
species are now
restricted to the
southern continents
Pelusios External view
of Africa and
South America. sinuatus
(Smith); Olduvai
Internal Beds; Early
view Pleistocene;
Tanzania.
rear girdle scars
Meiolania Skull
Meiolania
platyceps Owen;
The bizarre head of this tortoise could not be
Beach deposits;
retracted into its shell because of its large size and
the bony spikes that adorn the skull roof. The tail Pleistocene;
was heavily armoured and club-like, an Australia.
adaptation that probably helped when
defending its territory.
bony spike
HABITAT Meiolania belonged to a family
of tortoises that were omnivorous and
lived on land.
REMARK It is believed that this
family may have had its origins in the
rear
Late Cretaceous of South America, of skull
as a similar genus occurred there
at an earlier period.
auditory opening
Typical length 2m (61 ⁄ 2ft) eye socket of cranium
rib end
Trionyx
foveatus (Leidy); costal
(rib) plate
Laramie Formation;
Typical length Late Cretaceous; Canada.
90m (36in) front neural plate
Puppigerus
This genus has characteristic adaptations for large orbit secondary
an aquatic existence: large eye-sockets, with a roof
secondary skull roof behind them, and a fully Skull
formed secondary palate. The latter was
especially important, for it prevented an
unwanted intake of water while feeding
below the surface. In adults, the shell is
fully ossified, with an outer margin of
peripheral plates, while the plastron
(ventral shell) comprises four paired
elements and one centrally placed, all
of which are loosely connected by
finger-like projections in the midline.
The forelimbs developed into flippers.
HABITAT Puppigerus was a marine turtle, and,
like its modern counterparts, fed on sea grasses.
Its hindlimbs were less flipper-like, a condition that
possibly indicates a greater mobility on land.
Puppigerus crassicostata
REMARK Like modern sea turtles, females would
(Owen); London Clay; Early
have buried their eggs on sandy beaches.
Eocene; UK.
single entoplastron
epiplastron
hypoplastron
Plastron
Puppigerus camperi
(Gray); London Clay;
Early Eocene; UK.
hyoplastron
xiphiplastron
Typical length 90m (36in)
Geochelone
A common characteristic of tortoises like Geochelone pardalis
high-arched shell
Geochelone is a high-arched, fully ossified, (Bell); Laetolil Beds;
bumpy shell, embellished with concentric Pliocene; Tanzania.
markings. Other characteristic features of
this land-dwelling group include a skull
that lacks a secondary bone-covering
behind the eye sockets, and the
ability to withdraw the head
vertically and backwards.
Typical length
3m (10ft)
Belodon
Outwardly, the body of this phytosaur resembled that of our modern,
long-snouted crocodiles, having short legs, an ornate sculptured
surface to the skull, and considerable body armour. In detail, however,
the ankle joint and the plate-like elements of the hindlimb girdle
Belodon plieningeri
indicate a more primitive condition, and thus a more awkward gait.
The nostrils being situated on top of the head just forward of the eye Meyer; Keuper
sockets, rather than at the tip of the snout as in crocodiles, provides an Sandstone; Late
instant identification feature. These nostril openings are also elevated Triassic; Germany.
above the other skull bones, so that they could protrude above the nostril
water when the remainder of the body was submerged. openings eye socket
long,
hooked snout tooth row
jaw articulation
Gracilineustes
The metriorhynchid family is the most specialized of all known
crocodiles, and is perhaps the only archosaur group to become fully nostril
aquatic. Changes in its original habit are clearly reflected in its
skeleton, for the forelimbs were transformed into paddles, the
neck was shortened, the tail bent downwards at the end to
support a large caudal fin, and the body armour lost. In long snout
contrast to their more terrestrial crocodilian cousins,
the skull is long and lightly built – this was another
requirement for a fully aquatic mode of life.
Gracilineustes
HABITAT Species of metriorhynchids were particularly
common in the Jurassic seas of Europe, where they hunted leedsi (Andrews);
for fish and squid-like animals which shared the same Oxford Clay; Late
habitat. It may be that they only came to land to lay Jurassic; UK.
their eggs, in the manner of modern turtles. It is also
possible that they hauled themselves on to sand neural
banks to bask after hunting for fish. spine
articulation
REMARK The metriorhynchids belong to the
primitive mesosuchian suborder of crocodiles,
which appeared in the Triassic but finally
became extinct in the earliest part of the
Tertiary, some 60 million years ago.
eye sockets
Vertebra
flat-faced
articulation
large temporal
opening
jaw
articulation Skull
Typical length
3m (10ft)
Rhamphosuchus
Modern crocodiles are divided into three families: alligators, crocodiles, Rhamphosuchus
and gavials. Rhamphosuchus is a member of the gavial family. The crassidens Falconer
Gavialidae are regarded as specialized fish eaters, catching their prey with & Cautley; Siwalik
the aid of long, sharply pointed teeth situated in long, slender jaws. In Series; Pliocene;
Rhamphosuchus, however, the teeth are robust and conical, which is Pakistan.
suggestive of a mixed diet.
elongate snout nostrils
HABITAT This giant was an inhabitant of the larger
rivers and lakes of Central Asia.
Typical length
conical teeth 15m (50ft)
Diplocynodon Diplocynodon
Alligators like the medium-sized Diplocynodon can be hantoniensis
distinguished from true crocodiles by the absence of a Wood; Lower
pit to house the fourth tooth of the lower jaw. In other Headon Beds;
respects, the skull anatomy of the modern families is Late Eocene; UK.
basically similar, having a strongly buttressed skull with
a highly ornate bony surface, a jaw articulation set well
back to facilitate the wide opening of the mouth, and a
variety of rounded to sharply pointed teeth placed in
deep sockets in the jaws. The remainder of the crocodilian
skeleton is even more conservative, for its basic plan
has been unchanged since the Triassic. Neck
vertebra
HABITAT Unlike Recent species, Diplocynodon had a
distribution that encompassed both North America and
Europe. Although alligators are now restricted to America,
this genus was particularly common in the swamps of
Europe in Oligocene times. It had a mixed diet of animal
and plant matter.
REMARK The crocodiles survived the great extinction at
the end of the Mesozoic, becoming even more numerous
and widespread during the warmer periods of the Tertiary.
But their more primitive cousins became extinct at the rear ball
start of this era. articulation
neck rib
eye socket
Skull
broad snout
nostril
Typical length
3m (10ft)
Diopecephalus
Diopecephalus is thought to have been a small-toothed insectivore,
belonging to an order of archosaurs characterized by: delicate skulls Diopecephalus kochi
with lightly built skeletons; paper-thin, hollow bones; greatly (Wagner); Solnhofen
extended first fingers, supporting a wing membrane; and short Limestone; Late
legs. All family members had short tails and long skulls. Jurassic; Germany.
HABITAT The pterosaurs were the first reptiles to
develop powered flight, chasing and catching their
prey on the wing, in a manner similar to
that of certain birds.
teeth
long snout
eye socket
long
first
finger
upper
arm
bone lengthened
wrist bones
with fingers
elbow
ribs
thigh bone
short tail
ankle joint
DINOSAURS
THIS SUCCESSFUL GROUP, made up that gave rise to the birds. The
mainly of land-dwelling reptiles, first remarkable success of the dinosaurs
appeared about 225 million years ago, has been attributed to the modifications
having evolved from early archosaurs. in the limb and girdle bones, which
They are divided into two groups so improved their stance and gait that
based on their skeletal anatomy. These they were able to adapt to new habitats.
were the herbivorous Ornithischia Their sudden extinction in the Late
or “Bird-hipped” dinosaurs” and the Cretaceous ended 150 million years
Saurischia or “Lizard-hipped” dinosaurs. of domination of the land. However,
This latter group comprises the the birds, derived from small
large four-footed Sauropods therapods, can be referred to as
(Sauropodomorphs) plus the two- “avian dinosaurs” and survived
footed, flesh-eating Theropods, and lived on to dominate the skies.
Compsognathus
This small, chicken-sized dinosaur had recurved, serrated head
teeth set in a lightly built skull. The limbs are long, slender,
and hollow, and the pubic bone faces forwards.
eye socket
HABITAT This highly mobile,
bipedal carnivore preyed upon
insects and small, lizard-like tail
creatures, which it stalked and vertebrae
snatched from the ground.
REMARK Its hunting habit,
therefore, could have left hip
joint
been in direct competition
with those suggested for
the similar-sized bird
Archaeopteryx.
forelimb
knee
Compsognathus
longipes Wagner;
Solnhofen Limestone; long
Typical length 60cm (24in) Late Jurassic; Germany. hindlimb
serrated teeth
lower jaw
Lateral view of Typical length
partial skull 3m (10ft)
Daspletosaurus
A large head and powerful jaws, together with shortened Lower dagger-like
forelimbs bearing only two fingers, are typical features of right jaw teeth
this family of carnivorous dinosaurs.
deep
jaw
Daspletosaurus torosus
Russell; Judith River Formation;
Late Cretaceous; Canada. Typical length 9m (30ft)
Archaeopteryx
This small, chicken-sized therapod dinosaur was, for more than a century, regarded
as a link between birds and dinosaurs or the first true bird. It possesses a number of
reptilian features. For example, the lightly built skull has true teeth set in sockets in
the jaws; the breast bone is small and lacks a keel; the forelimb skeleton retains
three functional fingers, and there is a long bony tail. Archaeopteryx also possesses
characters that, until recently, one would only associate with birds, including reduced
fingers, a wishbone (furcula), and above all, feathers. The discovery of feathers and
feather-like structures on theropod dinosaurs as well as the discovery of flying
dinosaurs in China, has cast doubt on whether Archaeopteryx is a direct ancestor
of the birds (avian dinosaurs) or just closely related to their origin.
HABITAT Archaeopteryx hunted fish and insects along the arid shorelines
of sub-tropical coastal lagoons. It is likely that it could climb trees and to a
limited extent was able to fly, in order to evade predators.
feather
impressions
Archaeopteryx
lithographica Meyer;
Solnhofen Limestone;
Late Jurassic; Germany.
bony tail
Typical length
50cm (20in)
toothless beak
Cetiosaurus
The small head, long neck and tail, and solid limb
Vertebra
bones of this giant show it to be a member of the
reptile-footed dinosaurs. Its banjo-like vertebrae
are characteristic. neural
spine
HABITAT Cetiosaurus was a plant-eater,
but it is not certain whether it inhabited
articulation
the margins of lakes and rivers, or was a
process
plains wanderer. The latter suggestion is
the most favoured at present.
neural canal
flat-faced
centrum
Cetiosaurus leedsi
(Hulke); Oxford Clay;
Middle Jurassic; UK.
transverse
process
Typical length 20m (65ft)
Jobaria cutting
The basic body shape of Jobaria resembled that of edge Leaf-shaped
other sauropods, but the neck and tail were somewhat tooth
shorter. The skull was characteristically flat-faced with
a round profile, and the leaf-shaped teeth extended
along the length of the jaws.
HABITAT Like others of its type, this Jobaria tiquidensis Sereno
genus was a plant-eating quadruped et al; Tiourarén Formation; root
which lived close to well-watered areas. Middle Jurassic; Republic tooth
The large teeth were well adapted for of Niger.
shearing vegetation.
Fragment of
lower jaw
with teeth
Neuquensaurus Tail
vertebra
The titanosaurs were the last of the reptile-footed
plant-eaters, but their remains are usually fragmentary.
However, they appear to have followed the type in having
small heads, long tails, and elephantine limbs,
although the neck was shorter. Their most
important distinguishing feature is the
ball-and-socket articulation of the
vertebrae at the beginning of the tail.
Being long-faced, the most complete
skull is said to resemble that of
Diplodocus. At least one species
developed bony scutes as armour.
HABITAT Like others of its type, it may
not have wandered far from water.
ball
articulation
Neuquensaurus
Typical length australis (Lydekker); Late socket
12m (40ft) Cretaceous; Argentina. articulation
Skull fang-like
canine
shearing teeth
Typical length 1m (39in)
Hypsilophodon socket
The hypsilophodonts were medium-sized, light-bodied, articulation
land-dwelling bipeds. They show their primitiveness in
having teeth situated in the front of the upper jaws, and by
the extreme length of the backward-facing pubic rod. The
cheek teeth were of the shearing type, arranged in a single Single
row and replaced in batches of three. The feet were toe
four-toed, each terminating in a pointed hoof.
HABITAT Hypsilophodon fed
upon the fern and cycad-like
plants that dominated
the early Cretaceous.
tendon
attachment
pointed
hoof ball
articulation
Hypsilophodon foxii
Huxley; Hypsilophodon
Bed, Wessex Formation;
Early Cretaceous; UK.
Typical length 2.5m (8ft)
Iguanodon muscle
This genus is made up of large, heavily-built, attachment
single-rowed, area
land-dwelling semi-bipeds. The skull was rather long leaf-like teeth
in profile and lacked teeth at the front of the beak-like
jaws. The cheek teeth were arranged in a single row,
and were leaf-shaped when new, chisel-shaped when
worn. The forelimb was heavy, with the first digit of
the hand ending in a spike.
HABITAT Iguanodon was common in
Europe during the early part of the
Cretaceous. It fed on plants.
Lower
jaw
inner surface
Lower
right jaw
Typical length
front of jaw 13m (421 ⁄ 2ft)
Parasaurolophus tubular
This large, semi-bipedal, crested duckbill is identified by crest
Skull and
the bizarre extension of the nasal bones over the skull,
lower jaws
which forms a tubular crest over 11⁄2m (5ft) long.
jaw
articulation
Typical length
nostril cutting edge of teeth 10m (33ft)
Stegosaurus Angular,
This heavy bodied, quadrupedal genus can be bony plate
recognized by its very small and low-profiled
skull, and by the double row of alternating,
upward-pointing, angular plates and four tail
spikes that adorned the body. The combination
of blunt, leaf-like teeth and particularly short
front legs (about half the size of the rear) also
assists in identification.
HABITAT Stegosaurus was a plant-eater, using
its tail spikes only for defence.
REMARK The orientation and alternating
pattern of the angular back plates would have
made them ideal for regulating the animal’s
temperature, by radiating heat from its
massive body.
Stegosaurus sp.;
Kimmeridge Clay ;
Late Jurassic; UK.
articulation
Typical length 9m (30ft) facet
Stegoceras Thickened
The thickened skull roof, fashioned into a solid, bony dome skull roof
and partly surrounded by a lumpy frill, distinguishes the
bone-headed dinosaurs from the other bipedal
ornithopods. Further characteristics include the
bony
presence of teeth in the front of the upper jaw, frill
a single row of leaf-shaped cheek teeth, and
an excessively shortened pubic rod,
which lacks a connecting process to
the ischium (pelvic bone).
HABITAT All members of the
family were herbivores, living in
open country.
Euoplocephalus End of
This tank-like quadruped can be identified by its skull, tail
protected by a series of scutes fused to its surface, and by
its body, covered by a mosaic of flat and keel-shaped,
interlocking, bony plates which narrow to a tail that
terminates in a huge club.
HABITAT This genus
probably lived in arid areas.
vertebrae
mummified skin
Skull
single tooth row
toothless beak
Protoceratops
This small, stocky quadruped is characterized by a Elongate
horny beak, a small nose horn, leaf-like cheek teeth egg
set in a single line, and a broad neck frill containing
large perforations.
HABITAT Protoceratops probably lived in open
areas, where it fed upon plant stems which it cut off
with its powerful beak. The stems were then sheared textured
into smaller pieces by the cheek teeth. eggshell
REMARK In the 1920s, an American expedition
to Mongolia discovered numerous dinosaur nests
with eggs deliberately arranged in neat, concentric
rings. Some eggs contained bones of partly
Protoceratops
developed young, thought initially to belong to
Protoceratops. However, the eggs were later proved andrewsi Granger
to belong to oviraptors. More recently, a nest with & Gregory;
15 infant Protoceratops was discovered in Mongolia, Djadochta Beds;
suggesting that parental care was present long Late Cretaceous;
after hatching. Mongolia.
frill
Skull
skull roof
BIRDS
IT IS NOW WIDELY ACCEPTED that some It is difficult to define the point in time
non-avian dinosaurs were capable of when birds (avian dinosaurs) first arose;
flight, and that the acquisition of bird-like the general consensus is that it was
characters was gradual and progressive. during the mid to late Jurassic.
Phorusrhacos
eye socket nostril
Skull
The most outstanding feature of this
large, flightless genus is its gigantic
hooked bill, which resembles that
of a powerful eagle. It has been
suggested that it is related to the
present-day seriemas and falcons.
HABITAT It probably hunted over open
plains country.
REMARK The family first appeared during Phorusrhacos
the Oligocene in South America, where they inflatus Ameghino;
evolved and became the dominant carnivore. Santa Cruz Formation;
The superiority lasted until about four million Miocene; Argentina.
years ago, when they became extinct before
the end of the Pliocene. Typical length
1.5m (5ft)
Typical length
90cm (36in) bony tooth lower jaw
ankle joint
Aepyornis
Aepyornis was the largest genus of this ostrich-like
family, popularly known as the elephant birds. It grew
to an estimated weight of 450kg (1,000lb) – by far
the heaviest bird ever to have existed. Its weight
prevented any form of flight, resulting in
the loss of the keel on the breast bone
and the reduction of the wings. The legs,
however, were relatively short and
powerful, with a three-toed foot. The
ovoid eggs of these birds, found buried
in sand dunes, were huge, the largest
examples having a liquid capacity of
8.5 litres (1.87 Imperial gallons).
HABITAT Elephant birds are
thought to have been browsers,
feeding on fruit and leaves.
Egg
Aepyornis maximus
Geoffroy; Superficial
deposits; Quaternary;
South Madagascar. Massive
Typical length toe
3m (10ft) articulations metatarsus
Pachydyptes
enlarged head
Typical length
upper arm
40cm (16in)
bone skull
Primapus lacki
Harrison & Walker;
London Clay;
Early Eocene; UK.
Typical length distal articulation
17cm (63 ⁄4in)
Raphus
The enormous size of this flightless pigeon makes it easy to identify Raphus cucullatus
its fossilized remains. Notable bone features include a 17cm (63⁄4in) (Linnaeus); Superficial
long head, with a distinct hooked bill; reduced wing elements; a deposits; Quaternary;
keel-less breast bone; and short legs. Mauritius.
HABITAT Raphus was a ground dweller in wooded areas. It ate mainly
fallen fruit, and possibly grubs.
REMARK The extinction of the dodo during the 17th century was
caused by the predation of humans and the animals they introduced.
nostril
hooked
beak
Skull and
lower jaw eye socket
Typical length
1m (39in)
SYNAPSIDS
THE SYNAPSIDA IS A GROUP that but they were severely depleted by
includes all modern mammals and the end Permian extinction event.
their ancestors, the latter erroneously Those that survived found it difficult
referred to as mammal-like reptiles. to compete with the newly evolved
They first appeared during the and more agile archosaurs (crocodiles,
Carboniferous, more than 300 million dinosaurs and their descendants) in
years ago. Although the early examples the late Triassic. They did, however,
were small and lizard-like, they were give rise to the true mammals. The last
highly successful and adapted to a surviving group of the synapsids, the
variety of habitats. By the Permian, tritylodonts persisted into the
they were the dominant land vertebrates, early Cretaceous.
Dimetrodon
The most spectacular feature of this genus was the huge dorsal sail, the
result of the extreme elongation of the vertebral neural spines, which
characteristically remain smooth along their length. The skull is deep,
has dagger-like teeth, with the lower jaw articulation situated well Dimetrodon loomisi
below, and behind, the tooth row. Romer; Arroyo
Formation; Early
HABITAT This relatively fast-moving, carnivorous reptile
preyed upon less agile species in arid environments. Permian; USA.
REMARK It was this group of sphenacodonts that
acquired the adaptations that eventually eye socket
developed fully in mammals.
nostril
dagger-like
teeth
jaw articulation
Edaphosaurus
The overall body shape of this short-limbed, slow-moving quadruped
was similar to that of a giant lizard, but the neural spines of the
backbone extended upwards to form a skin-covered sail. Individual
spines have characteristic short transverse processes along their length.
Vertebra
The short, broad skull contained both marginal and palatal teeth. The
vertebral centra were strongly biconcave, a typical synapsid feature.
HABITAT This plant-eater lived in arid areas.
REMARK The spectacular sail was probably
a temperature control mechanism.
extended
neural spine
fragment
of palate,
with teeth
Typical length
3m (10ft)
Cynognathus
crateronotus Seeley;
Typical length
Karoo Formation; Early large canine tooth
2m (61 ⁄ 2ft) Triassic; South Africa.
Bienotherium yunnanense
paired incisors Young; Lower Lufeng Formation;
Typical length 1m (39in) Late Triassic; China.
MAMMALS
MAMMALS ARE A VERY successful group. vital mammalian identification feature is
From terrestrial origins they have colonized the jaw articulation between the dentary
most of the habitable areas of the Earth’s bone (the only bone in the lower jaw of
surface, the oceans, and the air. The main mammals) and the squamosal bone in the
identifying features of mammals, such as skull. The quadrate and articular bones,
the possession of hair, milkproducing forming the articulation in other
mammary glands, and the details of their vertebrates, became associated with
reproductive system, are rarely preserved mammalian hearing, and survive today as
as fossils. To the palaeontologist, the most the incus and malleus of the middle ear.
Taeniolabis enlarged
Taeniolabis
The multituberculates are an extinct order of primarily grinding
tooth taoensis (Cope); Early
small, rodent-like animals characterized by the
possession of highly distinctive teeth. One of the Paleocene; USA.
lower cheek teeth in each jaw was often enlarged
to form a massive grinding tooth. Two-thirds of
the mammals found in the Mongolian Cretaceous
were multituberculates.
HABITAT This small rodent was a tropical
forest-dweller.
Didelphis cranium
sagittal crest
Thylacoleo Right profile
of skull
Thylacoleo was one of the more remarkable
of the extinct members of the Australian
marsupials, and the largest of the indigenous
carnivores. Lion-like in many respects, this
animal was most closely related to the living
phalangers or cuscuses, a group that now
consists of small to medium-sized, arboreal
herbivores. The wide, short-faced skull
possesses large, paired front incisors, which Thylacoleo carnifex
seem to have fulfilled the functions of true (Owen); River deposits;
carnivore canines, and massive, long, blade- Pleistocene; Australia.
like, shearing carnassial teeth for cutting
up animal tissue. The braincase is small.
HABITAT This land mammal preyed on a incomplete
hard palate
wide variety of animals, many of which are now
extinct, including Diprotodon (opposite), which
was the largest of the native herbivores.
Base view
of skull
nasal
opening
carnassial tooth
Typical length 1.5m (5ft)
Procoptodon
This large kangaroo, now extinct, had notably heavy jaws and a Procoptodon goliah
relatively short face. Living kangaroos have smaller forelimbs than Owen; River deposits;
hindlimbs, being adapted for a primarily bipedal gait. The hindfoot Pleistocene; Australia.
was elongate and narrow, with unequal development of the digits.
The cheek teeth had two dominant transverse shearing
ridges, with a longitudinal connecting ridge. The paired Right
lower incisors protruded forward. In each jaw, there lower jaw
was only one premolar, a shearing tooth, and this was
followed by four molars, which erupted
empty
over a long period, moving forward in tooth
the jaw through the animal’s life. sockets
Diprotodon
Diprotodon, the largest of the extinct giant marsupials, resembled a Diprotodon australis
rhinoceros. It had huge, rodent-like incisor teeth, and cheek teeth Owen; River deposits;
each with two prominent transverse ridges, which wore down to Pleistocene; Australia.
form a shearing surface. The jaws were particularly thick and heavy.
Skulls of Diprotodon are disproportionately massive, with a high
nasal opening, large facial area, and small braincase. Left lower jaw
massive
jaw bone
Typical length 3m (10ft)
Desmana
Desmana is an aquatic insectivore, still found living in parts of Russia, large
mandibular
Ukraine, and Kazakhstan. The short legs each bear five digits, with
processes
deeply grooved terminal phalanges. The bones of the forelimb are
massive, with large muscle attachments. A short, thick clavicle is
present, anchoring the limb to a prominent sternum. The dentition
is typical of the insectivores, the molar teeth bearing many sharp,
Lower
pointed cusps for dealing with an insect diet.
pointed jaw
HABITAT Desmana was a common member of cusps
European lake and stream fauna in the Middle
Pleistocene, making nesting chambers in
muddy banks. It became extinct in
western Europe 250,000 years ago.
Desmana moschata
(Linnaeus); West Runton
strong jaw Freshwater beds;
Typical length 20cm (8in) Middle Pleistocene; UK.
Palaeochiropteryx
tupaiodon
hindlimb
Revilliod; Messel
bones
Formation;
Typical length 7cm (23 ⁄4in) Eocene; Germany.
Macaca pliocaena
(Owen); Thames Upper
Terrace deposits; molar
Middle Pleisto-
Typical length 70cm (28in) cene; UK.
Glyptodon
The body of this armadillo-like herbivore Skull
is almost completely clad in a bony massive
armour coat, which forms a head shield, zygomatic arch
a domed carapace made up of hundreds
of fused hexagonal scutes, and a dermal
sheath to the tail. The forefeet bear large
and powerful claws. Glyptodon has
a short face, a very deep lower jaw, nostril
and massive zygomatic arches.
The continuously erupting teeth
teeth
are set very deeply into the jaw without
and lack an enamel coating. enamel
Glyptodon deep
reticulatus lower
Owen; Alluvium; jaw
Leithia Underside
Dormice are a primitive group of rodents, with very
of skull
low-crowned grinding teeth which suit their mixed
plant-food diet. Their teeth have biting surfaces
divided into transverse ridges, which grind the
food as if between two files. In common with
many other herbivores, there is a long
gap (or diastema) between the incisor
teeth and the cheek teeth, dividing
the mouth into two distinct functional
regions, one dealing with procurement
of food, the other with mastication.
Leithia melitensis
Typical length Falconer; Cave breccia;
50cm (20in) Pleistocene; Malta.
high-crowned
cheek teeth incisor
Arvicola cantiana
(Hinton); Estuarine silts;
Typical length 7cm (23/4in) Middle Pleistocene; UK.
Hyaenodon
This large, specialized carnivore was terrestrial, walking on its toes Hyaenodon horridus
(digitigrade). It had well-developed, flesh-piercing canine teeth, and the Leidy; Fluviatile
upper first and second molars, along with the lower second and third deposits;
molars, developed into carnassial (meat-slicing) teeth. In modern carnivores, Oligocene; USA.
the carnassials are the last upper premolar and first lower molar.
HABITAT Hyaenodon was a land-dwelling carnivore.
nasal bone
sagittal
crest
strong
neck-muscle
insertions
Skull
cheek teeth
diastema
with many
low cusps
large
canines
Ursus spelaeus
Rosenmuller; Cave premolar
deposit; Pleistocene; Typical length
Germany. 2m (6½ft)
Cyrnaonyx
The family Mustelidae was characterized by small to medium-sized Cyrnaonyx antiqua
carnivores with short limbs, short muzzles, and particularly (de Blainville); “Otter
powerful jaws. They are not common as fossils. The largest tooth, Stratum”; Middle
the first lower molar, has two main components – an anterior Pleistocene; UK.
shearing blade and a posterior concave crushing surface known
as a talonid. The talonid is usually very well developed in the
deep
Mustelidae in comparison with other Carnivora.
insertion
for jaw
HABITAT These otters lived close to water and ate aquatic invertebrates,
muscles
small mammals, and waterfowl.
first molar,
strong, pointed with shearing
premolars blade and talonid
large canine
tooth
Panthera
The first lower molar of this large cat has a highly efficient Panthera leo
flesh-shearing notch that works against the blade of the (Linnaeus); Fluviatile
corresponding last upper premolar. The canine tooth is large deposits; Middle
and conical, with two prominent parallel grooves in its enamel Pleistocene; UK.
surface, typical of the family.
HABITAT Panthera was an open-country predator. large, three-cusped
REMARK Fossil lions are closely associated alveoli of missing last premolar
with fossil horses, and as premolar
the horses of the Middle
Pleistocene were large,
so, too, were the lions.
outer edge
of alveolus
of canine
Lower jaw
Phenacodus
vortmani (Cope);
Willwood
Formation; Early
Typical length 90cm (36in) Eocene; USA. Fragment of lower jaw
Toxodon
This was a large grazing animal, the size and build of a rhinoceros, with
robust limb bones and a short neck. The feet bore three, hoofed toes.
HABITAT The incisors and cheek teeth were continuously growing,
suggesting an abrasive diet, such as grass. Toxodon platensis Owen;
REMARK The notoungulates, like the Fluviatile gravels;
litopterns (below), evolved in isolation Pleistocene; Argentina.
in South America during
the Tertiary. Toxodon, like eye
Macrauchenia was the socket
last survivor of its order. short
nasal
bone
Skull
continuously
growing cheek teeth
Typical length 3m (10ft) alveoli for chisel-shaped incisors
Macrauchenia registration
This large, camel-like mammal had a long neck number
and three-toed feet. Its external nasal opening,
instead of being at the front of the skull, was in
the skull roof between the eyes. This has been
interpreted as denoting either an aquatic
mode of life or the presence of a trunk.
HABITAT Macrauchenia is
thought to have browsed on
the edges of lowland forests.
REMARK This specimen was
collected by Charles Darwin in 1834
on the famous voyage of
long
the Beagle. It still bears the
toe bone
registration number given by
the Royal College of Surgeons.
Bones of
Macrauchenia patachonica right forefoot
Owen; Fluviatile gravels; Typical length
Pleistocene; Argentina. 3m (10ft)
Phiomia flattened
Phiomia had short, protruding, flattened lower tusks (incisors) and longer, lower tusks
downcurved upper tusks. The cheek teeth are low, with conical cusps arranged in
three pairs (bunodont). A diastema is present between the tusks and cheek teeth.
The retracted position of the nasal opening suggests there was a short trunk.
HABITAT Phiomia probably fed on low-growing shrubs.
REMARK It is likely that the upper tusks were used for
defensive purposes.
diastema
articulates low-crowned
with upper cusps in cheek teeth
jaw three rows
Phiomia serridens
Andrews & Beadnell;
Jebel Qatrani Formation; Near-complete,
Oligocene; Egypt. Typical shoulder height
paired mandibles 2.4m (8ft)
Tetralophodon paired,
Tetralophodon
longirostris Kaup;
Tetralophodon represents the stem group for the true conical cusps
Middle Miocene;
elephants. The head was long and often lacked
France.
mandibular tusks, although those from
the upper jaw were often quite long. The
cheek teeth bear a series of paired,
conical, “bunodont” cusps, similar
to the mastodon’s.
HABITAT Tetralophodon is
thought to have browsed on
vegetation beyond the reach
of other herbivores. root
Deinotherium
giganteum Kaup;
Miocene; Germany. tooth root
Typical shoulder height
4m (13ft)
Mammut americanum
(Cuvier); Spring deposits;
Pleistocene; USA. cusps
Typical shoulder height arranged in
2.5m (8ft) parallel rows
Mammuthus Mammuthus
At about the same size as an Asian elephant, primigenius
mammoths must have proved a formidable prey Blumenbach;
for early human hunters. Mammoths first appeared Permafrost
in the African Pliocene and rapidly spread to Europe deposits;
and Asia. Their evolution can most readily be traced Pleistocene;
through their tooth structure. The teeth of a Siberia.
mammoth consists of a series of plates composed
of enamel surrounding a dentine core. Each tooth
erupted from the back of the jaw and slowly moved
forward as it wore, to be replaced by another tooth
from behind. The thickness and number of tooth
plates are important identification criteria. preserved
hair
HABITAT Mammoths are thought to have grazed on
grasses and low shrubs, Whole frozen carcasses have
been found in the Siberian Arctic. The carcasses
confirm the accuracy of drawings of long-haired
mammoths in European caves.
Hair
Mammuthus matrix of
primigenius dental
cement
Blumenbach;
Glacial gravels;
Pleistocene;
UK.
series of
enamel
plates Upper
cheek
tooth
flat chewing
Typical shoulder height 3m (10ft) surface
Titanohyrax Titanohyrax
ultimus
Resembling a very large guinea Matsumoto;
pig, Titanohyrax was the largest Jebel Qatrani
known species of hyrax, about Formation;
the size of a modern tapir. The Oligocene;
incisor teeth were enlarged for Egypt.
nibbling, the cheek teeth were
rhinoceros-like and quadrate,
with a thick enamel coat and Upper
prominent lophs. cheek
HABITAT It is probable tooth
that Titanohyrax browsed
on scrub vegetation.
enamel prominent
dentine lophs
Typical length 2m (6½ft)
Xenicohippus
This genus of early horse is related to the true horses, which evolved in Xenicohippus
North America and the palaeotheres, which evolved in isolation in craspedotum
Europe and became extinct in the Oligocene. Xenicohippus had four toes Cope; Wind River
on the forefeet and three toes on the hind feet, each of which bore a Formation;
small hoof. It was adapted for running but its gait was less erect than that Early Eocene; USA.
of a modern horse. Its teeth were low-crowned with low cusps, which
enabled it to live off a diet of both fruit and soft leaves.
Maxilla with
HABITAT Xenicohippus is thought
cheek teeth
to have lived in a tropical forest
environment. It was previously
included in Hyracotherium.
simple, low-
crowned tooth
fragment of
Typical shoulder height upper jaw
40cm (16in)
Equus
Among the best known of all the mammals, Hoof bone
articular
the horse is nearly extinct in the wild, but surface (third phalanx)
survives in domestication. A grazing,
terrestrial herbivore, the horse has square,
high-crowned cheek teeth with complex
enamel patterns. The feet are heavily
modified, being reduced to a single,
elongate metapodial with a shore phalange
terminating on a prominent hoof, thus
adapting them for rapid forward movement
on hard ground. The anatomy and physiology
of the digestive system, with a large caecum
and colon, enables horses to subsist upon
high-fibre diets with a low protein content.
HABITAT Modern horses and their relatives have tendon
teeth and limbs that are adapted for a grazing, insertion
plains-dwelling life.
REMARK The genus Equus first appeared
in North America in the Pliocene and rapidly
spread to every continent except Australia and Equus ferus Boddaert;
Antarctica. Cave paintings dating from the Cave earth; Late
Palaeolithic period indicate that the Late
Pleistocene; UK.
Pleistocene forms resembled the extant
Przewalskii’s horse, with a mane of short,
stiff, upwardly pointing hair.
Maxilla
molars premolars
Paraceratherium
Together with the closely related dentine
lndricotherium, Paraceratherium was the Fragment exposed
of maxilla by wear
largest land mammal ever to have lived.
lt could be described as a gigantic,
long-legged, hornless rhinoceros. The
absence of a horn has been deduced
from the long, slender nasal bones,
which are too weak to support
a horn. Its teeth bear a similar
pattern to those of the
modern rhinoceroses.
HABITAT This land
mammal was adapted
for tree-top browsing.
cheek tooth
hard palate
Paraceratherium
bugtiense
Cooper; Bugti Beds;
Typical shoulder height
Oligocene; Pakistan. 5m (16½ft)
Coelodonta thick,
rugose
The most striking features of the woolly enamel
rhinoceros were its prominent shoulder
hump, shaggy coat, and two horns
arranged in tandem. The cheek teeth are
high-crowned, with thick, rugose enamel square
and a heavy covering of dental cement. in occlusal
outline
HABITAT The woolly rhinoceros was a
grazer, feeding upon tundra grasses and
low-growing shrubs.
REMARK European cave paintings show a similar
animal, with two horns and a shaggy coat. high-crowned
cheek tooth
Coelodonta
Second antiquitatis
upper molar Blumenbach;
River gravels;
Typical length 4m (13ft) Pleistocene; UK.
Samotherium
This was a relatively short-necked giraffe with a pair of horns just behind Samotherium
the eyes. The muzzle was elongated, with a long diastema and a rounded boissieri Major;
end. The cheek teeth are high-crowned and adapted for sideways chewing, Tuffs; Late;
much like those of a sheep or cow. Miocene; Greece.
HABITAT The rounded muzzle is regarded as an sharp,
adaptation to grazing, so it is likely that Samotherium medium-crowned
crescentic
cheek teeth
inhabited open grasslands. In contrast, the modern ridges
giraffids (the giraffe and okapi) are browsers.
Hippopotamus alveolus
(socket)
Hippopotamuses are principally short-legged, stocky, aquatic of tusk
herbivores. They have long, protruding lower incisors, huge canine
teeth (tusks), a short diastema, and a battery of high-crowned
cheek teeth. They can exceed three tons in weight, although the
dwarf species illustrated here was the size of a small pig.
Hippopotamus minor
Demarest; Cave deposits; sockets of
Pleistocene; Cyprus. premolars
high-crowned
molars
Incomplete skull
Typical length
1m (39in)
Merycoidodon
This genus, formerly known as Oreodon, is distantly related to the camels,
although this was not reflected in its outward appearance. It was a short,
stocky animal, the size of a sheep. It looked like a short-legged deer or
horse, but had four toes on each foot. It had medium-crowned, crescentic
cheek teeth, and no diastema.
Skull eye socket
HABITAT During the Oligocene,
herds of Merycoidodon roamed the
woodlands and prairies of North
America, browsing on leaves.
Merycoidodon culbertsoni
Leidy; Brule Formation;
Oligocene; USA.
medium-crowned,
Typical length 1.5m (5ft) deep, robust mandible crescentic teeth
Skull roof
frontal bone
Gigantopithecus
blacki von
Konigswald; Cave
flat, worn
deposits; Early canines
Pleistocene; China.
Lower jaw
Typical height
2m (6½ft)
Paranthropus
The australopithecines were characterized by
robust skulls with powerful lower jaws, and
bipedal locomotion. Their canines were molars with
smaller than those of their presumed expanded
occlusal
ancestors, but the cheek teeth were surfaces
large, with thick enamel, suitable for
a tough, herbivorous diet.
HABITAT They lived in open country
and woodland environments in tropical
and subtropical areas.
Paranthropus boisei
(Leakey); Shungura
Formation; Pliocene;
Ethiopia.
premolar
Typical height
1.4m (4½ft) Lower jaw
Typical height
1.2m (4ft) canine tooth
Lower jaw
of young adult
poorly
Typical height developed
1.6m (51/4ft) chin
Homo sapiens
Modern humans are taller than the neanderthals, with
more gracile bones, more prominent chins, and more
domed foreheads. Their teeth are similar, though the
incisors are less protruding.
well-rounded
HABITAT Although once restricted to warm climates, Skull cap
skull
the acquisition of the skills to make clothing and
construct shelters allowed modern humans to colonize
more hostile environments. Cooperative hunting,
armed with simple stone and wood weapons,
allowed them to exploit prey that would
otherwise have eluded them.
REMARK Modern humans
manufactured a variety of
tools with specific functions,
as distinct from the
multi-purpose axes of
their forbears. The bone,
flint, and antler tools
shown opposite are often
found associated with
fossil human remains,
although not strictly
speaking fossils
themselves. Although
of different ages and
degrees of sophistication,
they indicate a level of culture
rather than a specific date.
Homo sapiens
absence of prominent
brow ridges
Linnaeus; Cave
earth; Late
Pleistocene; UK.
fully modern
dentition
small teeth
Upper jaw of
young adult
Typical height
1.7m (53/4ft)
Bone and
stone tools
Multipurpose flint
handaxe: found
in Kent, UK.
point
barbs
Barbed antler
harpoon: found in
Yorkshire, UK, and used
for hunting or fishing.
handle
ALGAE
THE ALGAE HAVE A fossil record that of calcium carbonate, or that developed
extends from the Precambrian to the tough-walled cysts. As algae released
present day. Some algae are important oxygen into the atmosphere, they were
age indicators and are used extensively responsible for a critical change in
in the oil industry. They present a wide atmospheric composition during
range of forms, from simple unicells the Precambrian about 2.4 billion years
to complex multi-cellular plants. ago. This is referred to as “The Great
Fossil remains are usually limited Oxidation Event,” which set the stage
to those that produce structures for complex multicellular life in
impregnated with silica or forms the oceans.
laminated
structure
bonded
detrital and
organic
materials
limestone
Typical height
3m (10ft)
Mastopora
honeycomb-like
pattern
Mudstone
The genus is characterized by clusters of
thalli originating from a central axis. The cast
resulting globular structure was covered by
a calcified mucillage, which helped it to be
preserved as a fossil. The reticulum was
formed by primary branches radiating from
a central axis; each branch terminated
bluntly and secreted a protective limestone
covering. The fossils have a characteristic
hexagonal honeycomb pattern on the
surface. Each hexagon has a raised border
with a depressed centre, imparting a rough
surface to the fossil.
Ischadites globose
shape
depressed spiral-
top patterned
ornament
Ischadites barrandei
Calcified
Typical height (Hinde); Limestone;
thallus
5cm (2in) Silurian; Czech Republic.
Bythotrephis Bythotrephis
gracilis Hall;
These soft-bodied algae were small to moderately Clinton Group; Late
large plants of simple, purely vegetative Silurian; Canada.
structure, with “Y”-fork branches. The fossils
are present as impressions or carbonaceous
films on the rock surfaces. There is often no Whole
detailed preservation, although linear plant
striations, which indicate the remains of
impression
tube structures within the body of the
plant, may be present on the branches.
Parka
The liverwort-like thallus or plant body of Parka
had a thick outer covering or cuticle. The plant
body itself sometimes had a simple “Y”
branch, and was only tens of cells thick. It
nearly always bore distinct rounded bodies
or spore capsules, which contained
numerous small spores.
HABITAT The protective outer covering to
both plant and spores may indicate that Parka
was, in fact, a land plant.
Fragment
of thallus
Parka decipiens
Flemming; Carmyllie beds;
Early Devonian; UK.
Zosterophyllum spore
Zosterophyllum
llanoveranum Croft &
capsules on
Zosterophyllum is a genus of plants that
stem side Lang; Senni beds; Early
had spore capsules placed near the end
Devonian; UK.
of the stem, but always on the side, never at
the extremity. The spore capsules were oval
shaped and on short stalks. The branching
was a mixture of “Y” type (these were less
pronounced) and “H” type.
mudstone
HABITAT Zosterophyllum grew
mainly on the margins of lakes.
REMARK It is probable that
plants like these gave rise
to the giant lycopods of
the coal swamps, such as
Lepidodendron (see p.294).
Typical height stems
25cm (10in)
HEPATOPHYTES
HEPATOPHYTES OR LIVERWORTS are contained in capsules borne on wiry
small plants, with flat (thalloid) or leafy stems. Today these plants are found in
bodies. They reproduce by spores damp environments worldwide.
Hexagonocaulon carbonaceous
film
SPHENOPSIDS
COMMONLY KNOWN AS HORSETAILS, stem. The spores are produced in
these plants have jointed stems and spore capsules, which are tightly
leaves produced in whorls about the grouped into cones.
Equisetites
These small horsetails had ribbed stems,
with spores present in terminal cones.
Individual leaves were jointed, linear, or
grass-like, with up to 30 per whorl. Scale
leaves clothed the base of the leaf. The tubers
plant spread by underground stems
and tubers.
HABITAT Equisetites lived in wetland
conditions. Their tubers are often Equisetites sp.;
found in fossil soils. Wadhurst Clay
Typical height Formation; Early
50cm (20in) root Cretaceous; UK.
Calamites
This horsetail was actually tree-sized. The branch
stem was ribbed and derived its strength
from an outer cylinder of wood-like jointed
tissue (as seen in bamboo), protecting stems
a spongy interior. The branches were
arranged in whorls about the thick main
stem. The leaves were sword-shaped,
with a single, central vein, and arranged
in whorls about the branch, which gave
a dense, almost ornamental-conifer look
to the mature plant. leaves in
whorls
HABITAT Calamites was one of several
primitive plant groups to reach gigantic
sizes in the Late Carboniferous swamps.
carbonized
REMARK The name Asterophyllites leaves
is used for one of the foliage types
of Calamites.
shale
Asterophyllites equisetiformis
(Brongniart); Coal Measures;
Late Carboniferous; UK.
Typical height
10m (33ft)
Equicalastrobus sporangiophore
Strobilus
FERNS
THIS LARGE GROUP of plants has a capsule types, found either on the
fossil record extending back to the underside of fronds or, more rarely,
Middle Devonian. Ferns have leaves, produced on specialized fronds. Sizes
called fronds, which usually consist of vary from large tree ferns to minute
leaflets, although some have entire or filmy ferns. They live in a wide range
undivided fronds. Reproduction is by of habitats, ranging from the tropics
spores produced in a variety of spore to cold, temperate regions.
leaflets
Zeilleria mudstone
Pecopteris
small-
toothed
pinnae
Most of these extremely large fronds
broke up before fossilization and only
toothed fragments, such as those
shown here, are found. The leaflets
were subdivided two or three times
and were typically parallel sided with shale
rounded ends. Venation was usually
simple, consisting of a central vein with
secondary veins coming at right-angles.
leaf bases
silicified
preservation
Section
Typical height of stem
2m (61 ⁄ 2ft)
Onychiopsis Onychiopsis
psilotoides (Stokes
This plant is known only from its fragmentary & Webb); Wealden
fronds. These appear as very delicate-looking, Beds; Early
feathery toothed leaves. The leaflets are Cretaceous; UK.
extremely narrow and join the stem at an angle
of about 30 degrees. Spore capsules have been
found on fronds from Britain and the USA. siltstone
Frond
Typical height
50cm (20in)
LYCOPODS
THE LYCOPODS OR CLUB-MOSSES spore capsules in the leaf axil, or
have a long fossil history, stretching aggregated into distinct terminal cones.
back to the Late Silurian. They reached In the Carboniferous, many lycopods
their peak in the Late Carboniferous, were tree-sized, with branches clothed
and today they are represented by in long, grass-like foliage and cones
only a handful of genera. All plants containing spores. Today, lycopods
have helically arranged leaves with are small herbaceous plants.
ironstone nodule
diamond-shaped
pattern
cast
Lepidostrobus
variabilis Lindley &
Hutton; Coal Measures;
Typical height
Late Carboniferous; Cigar-
30m (100ft) Locality Unknown. shaped cone
PTERIDOSPERMS
THIS DIVERSE GROUP of plants was foliage seemingly indistinguishable
at its height during the Late Palaeozoic from some ferns. Evidence of seed
and most of the Mesozoic. Pteridosperms association, discovered earlier this
were popularly called seed ferns, after century, has now placed them within
the Carboniferous forms that had their own group.
Coal ball
section
Alethopteris
This plant was characterized by large fronds
with toothed leaflets. Typically, the thick, robust cast
individual leaflets were not separated from
one another but connected by leaf tissue
running between them. Venation was thick, strong-
simple: a central vein with smaller veins veined leaflets
Alethopteris serlii
Brongniart; Coal
Measures; Late Typical height
Carboniferous; USA. frond part 5m (161 ⁄ 2ft)
Glossopteris
These were tree-sized pteridosperms with rosettes of small to very large leaves.
The leaves varied in shape from very narrow to broad, and were similar in shape to
banana leaves. The venation consisted of a broad central vein which was made up
of many smaller veins. From this, a fine reticulum (or net) of minor veins spread,
dividing the leaf surface into small lozenge shapes. The wood was of softwood type,
with evidence of growth rings, indicating a seasonal climate. Fructifications were
borne on specialized leaves, such as pollen-bearing capsules or seed-bearing structures.
Glossopteris
sp.; Red beds;
Permian; India.
shale
net venation
sword-shaped
leaves
straight leaf
margins
Typical height
8m (26ft)
Mariopteris small,
carbonized
Mariopteris maricata (Schlotheim);
Coal Measures; Late Carboniferous;
The large fronds of Mariopteris had a leaflets Czech Republic.
distinct organization, the pointed leaflets
being distributed on a frond divided into
four areas. Although not usually found
entire, part of one quadrant may be
found with a typically reduced basal
set of leaflets. Individually, the leaflets
had a single central vein, from which
secondary veins were given off at an
angle of about 60 degrees. The stem
consisted in part of old leaf bases,
with strongly marked striations
along its length.
HABITAT An inhabitant
of Late Carboniferous
swamps, some species
of Mariopteris may have
been scrambling or
climbing plants.
Typical height
5m (161 ⁄ 2ft) Compression fossil
Trigonocarpus
Casts and compressions of seeds from a variety of “plumb-bob”
pteridospermous plants are found as fossils. This seed had shape
three ribs dividing it into equal sections (and internally
into valves). The outside of the seed was usually covered Isolated
in longitudinal striations representing fibrous or woody seeds
bands, which strengthened the seed wall. The seeds
were attached terminally or beneath a
frond, but are rarely found in situ in
fossil form.
Trigonocarpus
adamsi Lesquereux;
Typical height Coal Measures; Late seeds strongly
5m (161 ⁄ 2ft) Carboniferous; USA. ribbed
Dicroidium Dicroidium
This large plant, a notable
constituent of some Triassic floras sp.; Ipswich
of the southern hemisphere, was Series; Triassic;
actually of shrub to small-tree Australia.
stature. The fronds had unusual
“Y”-forked branches, with opposite
leaflets along the complete length.
Palaeobotanists know little about opposite
pairs of
the plant as a whole; however, by
leaflets
association with other plant fossils,
they believe it was likely to have
been seed bearing.
HABITAT Dicroidium was
an inhabitant of tropical
tree-fern forests.
mudstone
“Y”-forked
leaf
Typical height
4m (13ft)
Pachypteris shale
block
A common constituent of many Jurassic floras, Leaf
Pachypteris had small fronds with a regularly or bed
irregularly lobed appearance. It possessed
an extraordinarily thick, waxy outer
covering, which is often preserved in
fossils. It was one of the last of the
pteridosperms, and became extinct
during the Cretaceous period.
HABITAT Pachypteris grew in
salt marshes.
Pachypteris
sp.; Shemshak
Formation;
Jurassic; Iran.
BENNETTITES
THE BENNETTITES or cycadeoids were several types are known. The form
very similar in appearance to sago palms of the plants varied from globular
or cycads. They were distinguished by stumps to branching trees, all with
their star-shaped flowers, of which palm-like foliage.
Williamsonia carbonized
flower
PROGYMNOSPERMS
THIS GROUP IS BELIEVED to be ancestral ferns. They began to produce both
to all seed plants. Appearing in the small and large spores, and determined
Devonian, some were moderately spore and seed reproduction during
large trees, while others were like tree the Late Devonian.
Archaeopteris compression
fossil
Archaeopteris was one of the first trees on Earth. Trees
leafy
of this genus were small to medium in size, with leafy shoots off
foliage reminiscent of some conifers. The leafy shoots axis
occurred in opposite arrangement in a
single plane. The leaves overlapped one
another and were subcircular to nearly limestone
wedge shaped. Leaves were replaced
by spore capsules on fertile branches. Archaeopteris
HABITAT This genus grew in sp.; Kiltorcan
floodplain woodland. Typical height Beds; Late
10m (33ft) Devonian; USA.
CORDAITALES
MEMBERS OF THIS GROUP of plants veins. Their reproductive structures
were ancestors of the conifers. They were were loosely aggregated cones,
distinguished by long, leathery leaves, producing flat seeds with a membranous
spirally arranged, with many parallel outer “skirt”.
Cordaites strap-like
leaves
An ancestor of the true conifers, Cordaites was a tree-sized
plant that bore huge, strap-shaped leaves in tight spirals
about the stem. The leaves have distinctive linear venation.
The cones were loose, terminal aggregations of spore
capsules or seeds. Some members of the genus were
thought to be mangroves, with arching stilt-roots.
HABITAT Cordaites
was an inhabitant of Cordaites angulostriatus
mangrove swamps and
Grand Eury; Coal Measures; Typical height
elevated hummocks.
Late Carboniferous; UK. 10m (33ft)
CONIFERS
THESE ARE USUALLY shrubs or trees temperate and subtropical genera,
distinguished by the production of but are flat and broad in tropical
woody cones of various shapes and sizes. podocarps. The seeds are produced
The leaves are often needle-shaped in mainly in cones.
Sequoia globular
This genus includes very large trees also known as coast shape
redwoods. Small, very globular cones are a feature of
these plants. The woody cone leaves (or bracts) are
arranged helically about a central axis, and have a seed
with a scale-leaf on the upper surface, near the base or
point of attachment. The cones do not often disintegrate
(as disassociated bracts), even as fossils, but open to let Pine cones
the seeds fall out.
Conifer wood
Silicified conifer wood;
Lower Greensand;
dark-stained
Conifer wood is distinguished by its very uniform Early Cretaceous; UK.
outer layer
appearance, and is commonly called “softwood”.
Growth rings can often be seen, as can resin canals
or ducts. The bulk of the tissue is made up of a
single type of woody cell called a tracheid.
Generic and species distinctions
between softwoods is difficult,
and can usually only be made at
microscopic level from the study
of ground sections. Similar wood is
produced by Ginkgo, and by some
progymnosperms and pteridosperms.
Metasequoia
Metasequoia occidentalis
(Newberry) Chaney; Shale;
These are large trees with small leaves in the form Oligocene; Canada.
of flattened needles, in opposite pairs along the
short,
twig. Seed cones are produced upon long feather-like
stalks and the cone leaves or bracts are in shoots
cross-pairs. At the base of the tree, where
it joins the roots, vertical growths of wood
called “knees” are produced.
HABITAT Metasequoia grows in
subtropical swampland, thriving
in very wet areas with its roots
carbonized
immersed in water. preservation
REMARK The plant was known
only as a fossil until 1941, when it
was found growing in Szechuan,
China – a remarkable example of
a “living fossil”.
leaves in
Typical height opposite
30m (100ft) mudstone pairs
broken
surface
Side view
interlocking
diamond
pattern
Top view
rusty
colour
seeds in
diamond-
Araucaria mirabilis shaped cavities
(Spegazzini) Windhausen;
Typical height Cerro Alto Beds; Early
30m (100ft) Cretaceous; Argentina.
Estimated height
30m (100ft)
Carbonized
Picea Picea sp.; Thanet
cone
This is a large group of mainly tall, narrowly Formation; Late
conic trees that today is confined to the northern Paleocene; UK.
hemisphere. Many spruce trees have characteristic
drooping branches, giving a distinctive tiered effect
to the whole plant. The stiff, needle-like leaves are
arranged spirally about the stem, and are two
to three centimetres (¾–1¼in) long. They grow
from small pegs, which remain if the leaves are
shed. The woody cones are pendulous, ovoid,
or cylindrical, and often have strongly recurved woody
bracts, which open to shed seeds as the bracts
cone matures.
diamond pattern
HABITAT The wood is of softwood type,
often with strongly marked growth rings, in
keeping with the seasonal montane climate
found in most pine habitats. Typical height 40m (130ft)
stalactitic
flow
cloudy area rich
in succinic acid
red patina
Baltic amber
(Succinite); Late
Eocene; Denmark.
Tree
(Pinus sp.)
GINKGOS
THIS WAS FORMERLY an extensive during the Early Permian and was
group of plants, but it is now represented at its height during the Jurassic. All
by a solitary relict genus, the Ginkgo or members had characteristic fan-shaped
maidenhair tree. The group appeared leaf architecture.
Ginkgo sp.;
Ginkgo Ardtun Leaf Bed;
These very tall trees have a distinctive fan- or Paleocene; UK.
wedge-shaped foliage. The leaves may be
notched or almost entire. The trees produce fan-shaped
leaf
spherical seeds.
HABITAT A “living” fossil, the
Ginkgo’s natural habitat is China, compression
fossil
but it has been introduced as an
ornamental tree in many parks mudstone
and gardens.
Typical height 35m (115ft)
EUDICOT ANGIOSPERMS
EUDICOTS ARE A MAJOR GROUP leaves range from herbaceous to tree
of angiosperm flowering plants types. All reproduce sexually by seeds.
that have two seed leaves and a The earliest record of the group is from
particular pollen structure. The Early Cretaceous pollen.
Betulites ironstone
nodule
The leaves of this genus have some similarity to
those of Betula or the birch family. They were round,
oval, or heart-shaped, and always had teeth
along the margin. Venation consisted of heart-
a central vein, with secondary veins shaped leaf
coming off at about 45 degrees. They
are usually found disassociated from
twigs, which indicates that at least
some were dropped seasonally. Betulites sp.;
HABITAT This genus grew in temperate
Dakota Sand-
climates and usually damp habitats. stone; Late
Typical height 10m (33ft) Cretaceous; USA.
Araliopsoides simple
venation
This genus is characterized by large leaves.
Typically, they were coarsely three-lobed, but
were sometimes of very variable appearance.
The leaf margins were smooth with no
teeth or serrations. The venation was
simple – a central vein with straight
secondary veins coming off at
about 45 degrees. They were
very thick and resilient, which
explains their survival
in sandstones.
HABITAT Araliopsoides grew in
warm, temperate to subtropical,
deciduous forests.
Araliopsoides
cretacea
(Newberry); Dakota
Sandstone; Late
Cretaceous; USA. three-lobed
Sandy- leaf
Typical height 10m (33ft) ironstone cast
Typical height
30m (100ft) Fruits
distinct
ray
structure
silicified wood
growth rings
mineral impurities
cause coloration
Typical height 40m (130ft)
Liquidambar five-lobed
Liquidambar
europeanum
These small to large trees are often called limestone leaf Braun;
sweetgum. The twigs sometimes have Freshwater
corky flanges or wings, and the leaves are limestones;
distinctively lobed or star-shaped, with Miocene;
five to seven points and toothed margins. Switzerland.
Leaf venation consists of a single, central
vein for each lobe, with nets of veins on
either side. Leaves are shed in the autumn.
Fruits are aggregates of woody, burr-like
capsules, borne on a long stem. The
wood is fine grained, with small
conducting tubes.
HABITAT They grow in
temperate, deciduous to
semi-evergreen, forests
and woodlands.
toothed
leaf
simple venation margins
Typical height 15m (50ft)
MONOCOTYLEDONOUS ANGIOSPERMS
THIS IMPORTANT GROUP of plants bewildering range of flowers and
is characterized by their mode of reproduction strategies. Fossil forms
germination – with a single seed leaf – are recognized from the Late Cretaceous
and by leaves with parallel venation. as palms and rushes, while grasses do
Included in the group are grasses, not appear until the Early Cenozoic Era.
narcissi, sedges, rushes, orchids, lilies, A possible monocot is recorded from
irises, and palms – all of them with a the Triassic of America.
GLOSSARY
THE USE OF SOME technical expressions illustrations. The definitions given below
is unavoidable in a book of this nature. have been simplified and generalized,
Commonly used technical words are and are appropriate for this book only.
often defined in the text itself, and many Words in bold type are explained
terms are explained by the annotated elsewhere in the glossary.
The flat area on a brachiopod shell ■ Matrix a series of bony plates sited in
between the hinge line and beak areas. The material on which an organism rests the midline of the upper shell
or is embedded. of turtles.
■ Internal mould
An impression of the inside of an ■ Maxillary lobes ■ Neural arch
organism. A part of the mouth of an arthropod. The upper portion of a vertebra.
■ Involute ■ Median tooth ■ Neural canal
Tightly coiled. A tooth placed in the midline of The channel through which the spinal
■ Ischium the mouth. cord passes.
One of the paired hindlimb girdle ■ Mesial tooth ■ Neural spine
bones of vertebrates. A tooth placed near the middle of The blade- or prong-like structure
■ Keel the jaw. located on the dorsal aspect of a
A raised midline structure that runs ■ Mesoplastron vertebra.
longitudinally along the medial surface In turtles, one of a pair of bony plates ■ Nodes
of the shell venter in some ammonites. forming the lower shell. Bumps or protruberances; in plants, the
■ Labial ■ Mesosuchian attachment point of leaf stem.
Pertaining to the lips. A primitive crocodile. ■ Notochord
■ Labial spines ■ Mesozoic A skeletal rod located above the nerve
The spines situated on the aperture The second era of the Phanerozoic aeon, chord of fish.
of certain gastropods. from 248 to 65 million years ago. ■ Nutritive groove
■ Lamina ■ Metamorphism Food channel.
A thin sheet or layer of tissue. A change in an organism’s structure ■ Nymph
■ Lateral teeth during development. An immature insect, or, in bivalves,
In bivalves, articulation structures ■ Metatarsal the narrow ledge on the hinge behind
towards the margin of the hinge. pertaining to the bones in the ankle. the umbo.
Glossary | 315
INDEX
A
Acadagnostus 56
Betulites 307
Bibio 78
coprolite 10
corals 50
Bienotherium 262 cordaitales 301
Acadoparadoxides 57 Bifericeras 150 Cordaites 301
Acanthochirana 70 birds 256 Cothurnocystis 193
acanthodians 210 Birgeria 211 Crepidula 124
Acanthoteuthis 165 Birkenia 195 crinoids 166
Acer 308 Bison 281 Crioceratites 151
Acidaspis 63 bivalves 94 crustacea 66
Acrodus 199 Blapsium 78 Cruziana 42
Acrosterigma 108 blastoids 190 Cryptoclidus 234
Acroteuthis 161 Bositra 98 Cupressocrinites 167
Actinoconchus 85 Bostrychoceras 159 Cyamocypris 68
Actinocrinites 169 Bothriolepis 196 Cyamodus 232
Actinocyathus 52 Bourguetia 119 Cyathocrinites 167
Actinostroma 35 brachiopods 79 Cyclosphaeroma 68
Aepyornis 257 Brotia 120 Cyclothyris 84
agnathans 194 Bryozoa 36 Cylindroteuthis 163
Aioloceras 152 bryozoan limestone 39 Cynognathus 262
Alethopteris 296 Bulla 132 Cyrnaonyx 271
algae 286 buying fossils 23 Cyrtina 88
Alveolina 32 Bythotrephis 288 Cyrtoceras 134
Amaltheus 146 cystoids 191
amber 306
C
Amblotherium 263
ammonites 144 Calamites 291
Calliostoma 118
D
Dactylioceras 149
Ammonoids 141
amniotes 225 Calonectris 258 Danocrania 92
amphibians 221 Calymene 61 Dapedium 213
Andrias 223 Campanile 121 Dasornis 257
Apateon 222 Cancellothyris 93 Daspletosaurus 246
Aphaneramma 222 Carcharodon 203 Declivolithus 58
Apiocrinites 173 Cardinia 107 Deinotherium 275
Arachnophyllum 53 carpoids 193 Deltoblastus 190
Araliopsoides 308 Cenoceras 138 Dentalium 114
Araucaria 304 Cenoceras simillimum 139 Derbyia 89
Archaeocidaris 176 Centroberyx 219 Deshayesites 158
Archaeogeryon 72 Cephalaspis 195 Desmana 266
Archaeopteris 300 Ceratites 143 Dicoelosia 80
Archaeopteryx 247 Ceratodus 211 Dicroidium 299
Archeria 224 Ceriocava 37 Dictyothyris 87
Archimylacris 76 Cetiosaurus 248 Didelphis 264
Arctica 108 Chama 105 Didymograptus 48
Arvicola 269 Charniodiscus 43 Digonella 90
Asaphus 64 Cheiracanthus 210 Dimetrodon 260
Aspidorhynchus 215 chitons 114 Dinilysia 231
Asteroceras 154 chondrichthyans 198 dinosaurs 245
asteroids 186 Chondrites 42 Diodora 116
Asterophyllites 291 Chonetes 83 Diopecephalus 244
Atrypa 84 Cimochelys 239 Diplacanthus 210
Aturia 140 Cirsotrema 127 Dipleurocystis 191
Aulacophoria 86 classification 7 Diplocaulus 221
Australorbis 133 Clavilithes 129 Diplocynodon 243
Aviculopecten 98 Clifton black rock 168 Diplodocus 249
Clymenia 141 Diplomystus 217
B
Baculites 160
Clypeaster 180
Coccosteus 197
Cockerellites 220
Diprotodon 265
Discinisca 92
Discitoceras 136
Balaena 270 Coelodonta 279 Dolomedes 75
banded flint 10 Coleopleurus 179 Douvilleiceras 147
Baragwanathia 295 Collenia 286
Basilosaurus 269
Batrachosuchus 223
Bathytormus 107
Colpophyllia 54
Compsognathus 245
Concavus 66
E
early land plants 289
Belemnitella 163 Concoryphe 17 Echinocorys 182
belemnite limestone 164 conifer wood 303 echinoids 175
belemnites 161 conifers 301 Echioceras 155
Bellerophon 115 Constellaria 36 Ecphora 128
Belodon 240 Conulus 180 Edaphodon 209
bennettites 300 Cooksonia 289 Edaphosaurus 261
Betula 310 copal 306 Edmontosaurus 252
318 | Index
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The original edition of this book could not have been Janos Marffy for airbrush artwork; Will Giles and Sandra
completed without access to the magnificent specimens Pond for illustrations; Andy Farmer for the illustrations
in the collections of the Department of Palaeontology on pp.11, 14, and 15; Adam Moore for computer back-up;
at the Natural History Museum, London, UK and the Ziggy and Nina at the Right Type; and Caroline Church for
assistance of both the scientific staff and the members Endpaper illustrations.
of the photographic unit.
Dorling Kindersley would like to thank Ankita Gupta and
Additional specimens were supplied by Matt Dale, Mr Wood’s Rishi Bryan for editorial assistance in this edition.
Fossils, Edinburgh, Scotland; Mark & Karen Havenstein,
Lowcountry Geologic, Charlton, USA; Steve Tracey, London, PICTURE CREDITS
UK; Vinnie Valle, V&L Crafts, N. Venice, Florida, USA; Hmad (Key: a-above; b-below/bottom; c-centre; f-far; l-left;
and Hamid Segaoui, Segaoui Brothers Erfoud, Morocco and r-right; t-top)
Moha Ouhouiss, Rich, Morocco. Finally, I must thank Charlie Photography by Colin Keates and David J. Ward except:
Underwood, University of London, UK; Emma Bernard, 13 Dorling Kindersley / Colin Keates: (t). 16 Nature
Natural History Museum, London, UK; Andy Gale, University Photographers / Paul Sterry: (cr); M. J. Thomas: (bl).
of Portsmouth, UK and Martin Munt, Dinosaur Isle Museum, 17 Dorling Kindersley / Colin Keates: (tl); Frank Lane
Sandown, Isle of Wight, UK for their encouragement, Picture Agency / W. Broadhurst: (tr); E. J. Davis: (cl).
assistance, and advice. 22 The Natural History Museum: (cl); Dorling Kindersley
The authors would also like to acknowledge the staff / Colin Keates: (bl). 23 Dorling Kindersley / Colin
and freelancers (Susie Behar, Peter Cross, Jonathan Keates: (t). 25 Dorling Kindersley / Colin Keates: (tr).
Metcalf, Mary-Clare Jerram, Gill Della Casa, and Clive 240 Dorling Kindersley / Colin Keates: (tr). 247 Dorling
Hayball) at Dorling Kindersley, for their enthusiasm, Kindersley / Colin Keates: (br). 255 Dorling Kindersley /
patience, and encouragement that made the original Colin Keates: (tr).
edition so successful. For this revised edition, the author Dr David Ward is a Research Associate based at London’s
would like to thank Angeles Gavira at DK London and Natural History Museum. His main professional interests
Hina Jain at DK India for their valuable editorial work, are the study of fossil sharks and rays and sieving
and Matthew Miller at the Smithsonian National Museum sediments to extract microvertebrates. He started
of Natural History for his expert guidance. his career in the early 1970s as a companion-animal
Dorling Kindersley would like to thank the following for veterinarian but switched to palaeontology following
their work on the original edition of the book: Susie Behar, a major dinosaur collecting trip in west Africa in the
Jonathan Metcalf, Alison Edmonds, Angeles Gavira, and late 1980s. Since then, he has led or participated in
Andrea Fair for editorial help; Ailsa Allaby for editorial numerous geological expeditions in Europe, the USA,
guidance; Scientific editors Cyril Walker and David Ward; north Africa and the former Soviet Union. David’s
Cyri Peter Cross, Clive Hayball, Elaine Hewson, Alastair passions include education and outreach and bridging
Wardle, Kevin Ryan, and Ian Callow for design help; the divide between amateur, commercial, and academic
Caroline Webber in production; Contributors: Dr Andy palaeontologists. He has contributed to more than a
Gale, David Sealey, Dr Paul Taylor, Dr Richard Fortey, hundred scientific papers and received awards for
Dr Brian Rosen, Sam Morris, Dr Ed Jarzembowski, his work from the Geological Society, London, the
Dr Neville Hollingworth, Steve Tracey, Dr Chris Duffin, Palaeontological Association, the Marsh Christian
Dr David Ward, Dr Angela Milner, Cyril Walker, Andy Trust, and the Society of Vertebrate Palaeontology.
Current, Miranda Armour-Chelu, Robert Kruszynski, All other images © Dorling Kindersley
Dr Jerry Hooker, Mark Crawley; Consultants Dr Chris
Cleal, Dr Peter Forey, Dr Andrew Smith, David Sealey; For further information see: www.dkimages.com
Michael Allaby for compiling the index and glossary;