- Tribrachidium
Taxobox
name = "Tribrachidium heraldicum"
image_caption = Fossil of "Tribrachidium heraldicum"
image2_caption = Colourful reconstruction
fossil_range = fossil range|558|542Ediacaran - 558-542Ma [cite journal
author = Grazhdankin, Dima
year = 2004
title = Patterns of distribution in the Ediacaran biotas: facies versus biogeography and evolution
journal = Palæobiology
volume = 30
issue = 2
pages = 203–221
issn =
doi =
url = http://paleobiol.geoscienceworld.org/cgi/reprint/30/2/203.pdf
accessdate = 2007-03-08
format=PDF]
regnum = "incertae sedis "
subphylum =Trilobozoa
familia =Tribrachididae
(Runnegar, 1992) [ [http://www.palaeos.com/Proterozoic/Neoproterozoic/Ediacaran/Ediacaran.4.html Palaeos Proterozoic : Neoproterozoic: Ediacaran : Ediacaran Period - 4 ] ]
genus = "Tribrachidium"
species = "T. heraldicum""Tribrachidium heraldicum" ("Heraldic Three Arms") was an early
Ediacaran organism famous for its unusual tri-radialsymmetry . It was named and first described fromSouth Australia byMartin Glaessner and Brian Daily in 1959.cite journal
author = Glaessner, M.F.
coauthors = Daily, B.
year = 1959
title = The geology and Late Precambrian fauna of the Ediacara fossil reserve
journal = Records of the South Australian Museum
volume = 13
issue = 3
pages = 369–401
url= http://www.samuseum.sa.gov.au/Journals/RSAM/RSAM_v013/rsam_v013_p369p402.pdf
accessdate = 2008-01-26
format=PDF]"Tribrachidium" fossils are found in numerous locations throughout the world, including Newfoundland, the
Northwest Territories , the cliffs along the shores of theWhite Sea inRussia , andEdiacara Hills ,Australia , where the first specimens were found. They show a disc-shaped creature about 5cm in diameter on average, with three curved "arms" extending from the centre to nearly the edge. These arms were probably hollow and could be inflated or deflated. This threefold symmetry is almost unique in animals, which are usually either bilaterally orradial ly symmetric. Fleshy ridges, or possibly loose filaments, extended from the edges of the arms and formed the rest of the body.Like many
Precambrian fossils, the relationship of "Tribrachidium" to other animals is poorly known. To some extent it has become aposter child for the problem in general, often being shown as an example of that era's peculiar lifeforms. Among others, "Tribrachidium" has been described variously as acnidaria n,lophophore ,echinoderm ,ecdysozoa n or even as an odd, outlying member of thedipleurozoa — a proposedstem group to thechordate s. Some have even speculated that it is not a complete animal, but rather theholdfast of a larger creature. Still others suggest that it was not an animal at all, but, either aprotist , or the member of some now-extinct kingdom of multicellular organisms.Recently, A.Y. Ivantsov and M.A. Fedonkin have interpreted "T. heraldicum", and its relatives, as being cnidarians.cite journal
author = Ivantsov, A.Y.
coauthors = Fedonkin, M.A.
year = 2002
title = Conulariid-like Fossil From The Vendian Of Russia: A Metazoan Clade Across The Proterozoic/palaeozoic Boundary
journal = Palaeontology
volume = 45
pages = 1219–1229
doi = 10.1111/1475-4983.00283] This is because of the discovery and analysis of a Precambrianconulate , "Vendoconularia ", that they regard as related to thetrilobozoa ns because of its sixfold symmetry.Together with two other tri-radially symmetrical organisms, "
Anfesta stankovskii ", and "Albumares brunsae ", both from the shores of the White Sea, "Tribrachidium" belongs to the familyTribrachididae .Links
*Palaeos dendrogram [http://www.palaeos.org/Trilobozoa]
References
* [http://icb.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/43/1/114 Anatomical Information Content in the Ediacaran Fossils and Their Possible Zoological Affinities] , Jerry Dzik, Instytut Paleobiologii PAN, Twarda 51/55, 00-818 Warszawa, Poland
* [http://icb.oxfordjournals.org/cgi/content/full/43/1/104 The Ediacaran Biotas in Space and Time] , Ben Waggoner, Department of Biology, University of Central Arkansas, Conway, Arkansas 72035-5003
* McMenamin, Mark A. S. The Garden of Ediacara New York: Columbia University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-231-10559-2
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