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About 5,000 fossil genera. Brachiopods (/ ˈbrækioʊˌpɒd /), phylum Brachiopoda, are a phylum of trochozoan animals that have hard "valves" (shells) on the upper and lower surfaces, unlike the left and right arrangement in bivalve molluscs. Brachiopod valves are hinged at the rear end, while the front can be opened for feeding or closed for ...
Evolution of brachiopods. The origin of the brachiopods is uncertain; they either arose from reduction of a multi-plated tubular organism, or from the folding of a slug-like organism with a protective shell on either end. Since their Cambrian origin, the phylum rose to a Palaeozoic dominance, but dwindled during the Mesozoic.
A Devonian spiriferid brachiopod from Ohio which served as a host substrate for a colony of hederellids. Spiriferida is an order of extinct articulate brachiopod fossils which are known for their long hinge-line, which is often the widest part of the shell. In some genera (e.g. Mucrospirifer) it is greatly elongated, giving them a wing-like ...
Rafinesquina is an extinct genus of large brachiopod that existed from the Darriwilian to the Ludlow epoch. [1] The genus was named in honor of polymath Constantine Samuel Rafinesque-Schmaltz. [2]
The invertebrate fossils found within the Kaibab Limestone include brachiopods, conodonts, corals, crinoids, echinoid spines, mollusks, hexactinellid and other sponges, trilobites, and burrows of callanassid shrimp. The fossil cephalopods found in the Kaibab Limestone include giant football-sized nautiloids.
Strophomenida is an extinct order of articulate brachiopods which lived from the lower Ordovician period to the mid Carboniferous period. [2] Strophomenida is part of the extinct class Strophomenata, and was the largest known order of brachiopods, encompassing over 400 genera [citation needed]. Some of the largest and heaviest known brachiopod ...
Composita is an extinct brachiopod genus that lived from the Late Devonian to the Late Permian. [1] Composita had a cosmopolitan global distribution, having lived on every continent except Antarctica. [1][2] Composita had a smooth shell with a more or less distinct fold and sulcus and a round opening for the pedicle on the pedicle valve.
See text. Mucrospirifer is a genus of extinct brachiopods in the class Rhynchonellata (Articulata) and the order Spiriferida. They are sometimes known as "butterfly shells". [2] Like other brachiopods, they were filter feeders. These fossils occur mainly in Middle Devonian strata [2] and appear to occur around the world, except in Australia and ...