Cyanorus

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Cyanorus
Temporal range: Ediacaran, around 555  Ma
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Cyanorus singularis.jpg
Restoration of C. singularis
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Proarticulata
Class: Cephalozoa
Family: Sprigginidae
Genus: Cyanorus
Ivanstov, 2004
Species:
C. singularis
Binomial name
Cyanorus singularis
Ivanstov, 2004 [1]

Cyanorus singularis [a] is a small proarticulatan, closely related to Spriggina and Marywadea . [2] The anterior part of the body was most likely not segmented. The axial structure of it combines features of the Vendia species and Dickinsonia species. It was found in the Upper Vendian of the White Sea area, Arkhangel'sk Region. [2] It is a White Sea Ediacaran fossil and it became extinct during the Late Precambrian.

Like other animals from the phylum Proarticulata, the symmetry observed is not exactly bilaterian [3] but appears to be a glide reflection, where opposite segments are shifted by half an interval. [4] [5] [6]

Notes

  1. The genus name is derived from the Greek,κυανεος ορος, which means Blue Mountain, in honor of the name of the area of the same name, where the fossils were found.

Related Research Articles

<i>Dickinsonia</i> Extinct genus of early animals

Dickinsonia is a genus of extinct organism, most likely an animal, that lived during the late Ediacaran period in what is now Australia, China, Russia, and Ukraine. It is one of the best known members of the Ediacaran biota. The individual Dickinsonia typically resembles a bilaterally symmetrical ribbed oval. Its affinities are presently unknown; its mode of growth has been considered consistent with a stem-group bilaterian affinity, though various other affinities have been proposed. It lived during the late Ediacaran. The discovery of cholesterol molecules in fossils of Dickinsonia lends support to the idea that Dickinsonia was an animal, though these results have been questioned.

<i>Yorgia</i> Extinct proarticulate animal

Yorgia waggoneri is a discoid Ediacaran organism. It has a low, segmented body consisting of a short wide "head", no appendages, and a long body region, reaching a maximum length of 25 cm (9.8 in). It is classified within the extinct animal phylum Proarticulata.

Marywadea is a genus of Ediacaran biota shaped like an oval with a central ridge. It is a bilaterian organism as evidenced by its symmetry, vaguely resembling a very primitive trilobite. The fossil has an asymmetrical first chamber of the quilt. It has transverse ridges away from the central axis that may be gonads. The head is shaped as a semicircle and is the same width as the rest of the body. The ridges number about 50. There are two oval shapes below the head.

<i>Cephalonega</i> Extinct genus of invertebrates

Cephalonega stepanovi is a fossil organism from Ediacaran deposits of the Arkhangelsk Region, Russia. It was described by Mikhail A. Fedonkin in 1976

<i>Vendia</i> Fossil taxon

Vendia is a genus of oval-shaped, Ediacaran fossils ranging from 4.5 to 12.5 mm long. The body is completely segmented into isomers, which are arranged alternately in two rows longitudinal to the axis of the body. The larger isomers cover the smaller ones externally but the posterior ends of all the isomers remain free. The transverse elements decrease in size from anterior to posterior and are all inclined in the same direction.

<i>Anfesta</i> Extinct genus of marine invertebrates

Anfesta stankovskii is a tri-radially symmetrical fossil animal that lived in the late Ediacaran (Vendian) seafloor. It is a member of the extinct group Trilobozoa.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Proarticulata</span> Extinct phylum of animals

Proarticulata is a proposed phylum of extinct, near-bilaterally symmetrical animals known from fossils found in the Ediacaran (Vendian) marine deposits, and dates to approximately 567 to 550 million years ago. The name comes from the Greek προ = "before" and Articulata, i.e. prior to animals with true segmentation such as annelids and arthropods. This phylum was established by Mikhail A. Fedonkin in 1985 for such animals as Dickinsonia, Vendia, Cephalonega, Praecambridium and currently many other Proarticulata are described.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vendiamorpha</span> Extinct class of simple animals

Vendiamorpha is a class of extinct animals within the Ediacaran phylum Proarticulata.

<i>Tamga hamulifera</i> Extinct species of Cambrian organism

Tamga hamulifera is a disk-shaped fossil from Precambrian strata of the White Sea area, in Russia, the only member of the genus Tamga.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Isomer (Proarticulata)</span> Element in fossils

Isomer is an element of transverse body articulation of the bilateral fossil animals of the Phylum Proarticulata from the Ediacaran (Vendian) period. This term has been proposed by Andrey Yu. Ivantsov, a Russian paleontologist from the Laboratory of the Precambrian organisms, Paleontological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences.

<i>Epibaion</i>

Epibaion is a trace fossil imprint of the Ediacaran animals of the phylum Proarticulata, which became extinct in the Precambrian. Imprints often occurring in chains, that is interpreted as a feeding trace; some chains terminate in a body fossil, allowing their maker to be identified. Several specimens are known; E. waggoneris was produced by Yorgia waggoneri; E. costatus by Dickinsonia costata, and E. axiferus, the type species, has as yet not been found with a trace-maker. It is proposed that the Australian fossil Phyllozoon is also a feeding trace of Proarticulata.

<i>Andiva</i> Vendian fossil

Andiva ivantsovi is a Vendian fossil, identified to be a bilaterian triploblastic animal in the Ediacaran phylum Proarticulata, known from the Winter Coast, White Sea, Russia. It was first discovered in 1977, and described as a new species in a new genus by Mikhail Fedonkin in 2002. It lived about 555 million years ago. Fossils of Andiva also occur in South Australia. All known fossils of Andiva are external molds.

<i>Lossinia</i> Extinct species of marine organism

Lossinia lissetskii is a fossil marine organism from Precambrian strata of the White Sea area, in Russia. L. lissetskii is a member of the extinct phylum Proarticulata.

<i>Solza</i> (animal)

Solza margarita is an extinct animal of uncertain phylogeny which lived about 555 mya in the Ediacaran period.

<i>Archaeaspinus fedonkini</i> Extinct species of animal

Archaeaspinus fedonkini is an extinct proarticulatan organism from the Late Precambrian (Ediacaran) period.

<i>Temnoxa molluscula</i> Extinct species of Ediacarian animal

Temnoxa molluscula is a small creature approximately 8 mm wide found in the Ediacaran period in Russia. The Temnoxa has a resemblance to a vertically cut penny bun mushroom. Due to the lack of information regarding the fossils of this organism, researchers are unable to place Temnoxa molluscula into any known phylum. The genus was originally discovered by Russian paleontologist Andrey Yu. Ivantsov in 2004.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Cephalozoa</span> Extinct class of marine animals

Cephalozoa are an extinct class of primitive segmented marine organisms within the Phylum Proarticulata from the Ediacaran period. They possessed bilateral symmetry and were characterized by a thin, rounded body.

<i>Ivovicia</i> Genus of proarticulate

Ivovicia is an extinct genus of proarticulates. This monotypic genus has only one species: Ivovicia rugulosa.The genus is named after the Ivovik creek, near the place where the specimen was found.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Palaeopascichnid</span>

A "Palaeopascichnid" describes a multitude of elongate fossils made up of multiple sausage-shaped chambers. They appear only in Ediacaran sediments. Fossils of Palaeopascichnids consist of an occasionally branching series of globular or elongate chambers. These fossils started appearing in the Vendian about 580 million years ago. Fossils of Palaeopascichnids are found in East European platform, Siberia, South China (Lantian), Australia, India (Tethys), Avalonia

References

  1. "Species †Cyanorus singularis - Hierarchy - The Taxonomicon". taxonomicon.taxonomy.nl. Retrieved 15 December 2018.
  2. 1 2 Ivantsov, A. Yu. (2004). "New Proarticulata from the Vendian of the Arkhangel'sk Region". Paleontological Journal. 38 (3): 247. CiteSeerX   10.1.1.738.7043 .
  3. McCall, GJH (2006). "The Vendian (Ediacaran) in the geological record: Enigmas in geology's prelude to the Cambrian Explosion". Earth-Science Reviews. 77 (1–3): 1–229. Bibcode:2006ESRv...77....1M. doi:10.1016/j.earscirev.2005.08.004.
  4. Ivantsov, Andrey (2001). "Vendian and Other Precambrian "Arthropods"". Paleontological Journal. 35: 335–343.
  5. Ivantsov, Andrey (2011). "Feeding traces of proarticulata-the Vendian Metazoa". Paleontological Journal. 45 (3): 237–248. doi:10.1134/S0031030111030063.
  6. Ivantsov, Andrey (December 2023). Abstract of the thesis paleobiology of Proarticulata and the problem of the rise of Bilateria. Russian Academy of Sciences (Thesis). Retrieved 4 Dec 2024.