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New data on the enigmatic Ocruranus–Eohalobia group of Early Cambrian small skeletal fossils
Authors:MICHAEL J. VENDRASCO  GUOXIANG LI  SUSANNAH M. PORTER  CHRISTINE Z. FERNANDEZ
Affiliation:1. Institute for Crustal Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA, 93106, USA;2. e‐mail mvendrasco@fullerton.edu;3. Present address: Department of Biological Science (MH‐282), California State University, Fullerton, PO Box 6850 Fullerton, CA 92834‐6850, USA;4. LPS, Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 39 East Beijing Road, Nanjing 210008, China;5. e‐mail gxli@nigpas.ac.cn;6. Department of Earth Science and Institute for Crustal Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA;7. e‐mail porter@geol.ucsb.edu;8. 14601 Madris Ave., Norwalk, CA 90650, USA;9. e‐mail cfernandez@bren.ucsb.edu
Abstract:Abstract: The OcruranusEohalobia group, whose members were variously considered to be brachiopods, bivalves, chitons, tommotiids and coeloscleritophorans, are difficult to classify because of lack of morphological detail and evidence for skeletal reconstruction. New specimens from South China reveal more information about OcruranusEohalobia and allow progress towards deciphering the skeletal reconstruction and phylogenetic affinity of this enigmatic group. Many specimens have a phosphatic inner and outer coat (mould) with empty space in between that resulted from dissolution of the original shell. Moreover, many of the internal moulds show a previously unknown type of shell microstructure that consisted of stacked layers of highly organized, acicular crystallites that radiated from the apex of the shell towards the aperture. The dissolved shell and needle‐like crystals suggest an original calcareous, probably aragonitic, shell mineralogy. A few specimens also show a polygonal texture in regions that suggests the shell had a thin, prismatic inner shell microstructure. Ocruranus and Eohalobia belong to the same skeleton, and we herein synonymize Eohalobia with the older Ocruranus. Moreover, new specimens from Meishucun reveal a third type of shell plate, similar in form and inferred placement to intermediate valves of chitons. Ocruranus is likely a mollusc, and possibly a member of the chiton stem lineage. If so, then the beginning of the known record of chitons would be extended back from late Cambrian (Saukia Zone; Furongian) to early Cambrian (Meishucunian; Series 1).
Keywords:Cambrian  mollusc  Ocruranus  Eohalobia  Meishucun  chiton  Polyplacophora
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