- Invertebrate paleontology
Invertebrate paleontology (also spelled Invertebrate palaeontology) is sometimes described as Invertebrate paleozoology and/or Invertebrate paleobiology. Whether it is considered to be a subfield of
paleontology ,paleozoology , and/orpaleobiology , this discipline is thescientific study ofprehistoric invertebrate s by analyzinginvertebrate fossil s in the geologic record.By "invertebrates" are meant the "non-vertebrate" creatures of the kingdom
Animalia (orMetazoa +b vmbnParazoa ) in the biotic domain ofEukaryota . By phyletic definition, these many-celled, "sub-vertebrate" animals lack avertebral column ,spinal column ,vertebrae ,backbone , or long, full-lengthnotochord -- in contrast, of course, to thevertebrate s in the one phylum ofChordata .Relatedly, invertebrates have never had a
cartilaginous and/orbone y internalskeleton , with itsskeletal supports,gill slit s,rib s andjaw s. Finally, throughoutgeologic time , invertebrates have remained non-craniate creature s; that is, they never developed acranium ,nerve -chord brain ,skull , or hard protectivebraincase .Invertebrate terminology in science
In the many decades since
Jean-Baptiste de Lamarck , a pioneeringbiologist andevolutionist , first conceptualized and coined the category "Invertebrata " (between1793 and1801 ) and the term "Biology " (in 1802),zoology has come to recognize that the "non-vertebrate" category is not a scientifically-valid,monophyletic taxon .Evolutionary biology anddevelopmental biology (a.k.a. "evo-devo ") now consider the term "Invertebrata" to be bothpolyphyletic andparaphyletic . Nevertheless, mostearth science departments continue to employ this term; andpaleontologist s find it both useful and practical in evaluating fossil invertebrates and -- consequently -- invertebrate evolution.However, there is one contemporary caveat: Paleobiologists and
microbiologist s in the 21st century no longer classifyone-celled "animal-like"microbe s "either" asinvertebrate s "or" asanimal s. For example, the commonly-fossilized foraminifera ("forams") andradiolarians --zooplankton both formerly grouped under either an animal phylum or animal sub-kingdom calledProtozoa ("first animals") -- are now placed in the kingdom or super-kingdomProtista orProtoctista (and thus called "protists" or "protoctists").Thus modern invertebrate paleontologists deal largely with fossils of this more strictly defined
Animal Kingdom (exceptingPhylum Chordata ), Phylum Chordata being the exclusive focus ofvertebrate paleontology .Protist fossils are then the main focus ofmicropaleontology , while plant fossils are the chief focuspaleobotany . Together these four represent the traditional taxonomic divisions of paleontologic study.Origins and modern evolution of invertebrate paleontology
Invertebrate fossilization
When it comes to the fossil record, "soft-"bodied and "minuscule" invertebrates -- such as hydras, jellies,
flatworm s,hairworm s,nematode s,ribbon worm s,rotifer s androundworm s -- are infrequentlyfossilized . As a result,paleontologist s and other fossil hunters must often rely ontrace fossil s,microfossil s, orchemofossil residue when scouting for these prehistoric creatures."Hard-"bodied and "large" invertebrates are much-more commonly preserved; typically as sizeable
macrofossil s. These invertebrates are more frequently preserved because their hard parts -- for example, shell, armor, plates, tests,exoskeleton ,jaw s orteeth -- are composed ofsilica (silicon dioxide ),calcite oraragonite (both forms ofcalcium carbonate ),chitin (aprotein often infused withtricalcium phosphate ), and/orkeratin (an even-more complexprotein ), rather than the vertebratebone (hydroxyapatite ) orcartilage offish es and land-dwellingtetrapod s.The
chitinous jaws ofannelid s (such as the marinescolecodonts ) are sometimes preserved as fossils; while manyarthropod s and inarticulatebrachiopod s have easily-fossilized hard parts ofcalcite ,chitin , and/orkeratin . The most common and often-found macrofossils are the very hardcalcareous shells of articulatebrachiopod s (that is, the everyday "lampshell s") and ofmollusk s (such as the omnipresentclam s,snail s,mussels andoyster s). On the other hand, non-shellyslug s and non-tubiferousworm s (for instance,earthworm s) have only occasionally been preserved due to their lack of hard parts.Taxonomy of commonly-fossilized invertebrates
Footnotes
Further reading
Although these books are "not" footnoted in this article, the following are well-illustrated, well-organized -- and often well-worn -- guides to invertebrate (and sometimes other) fossils:
* Paolo Arduini (1987), "Simon and Schuster's Guide to Fossils" (Old Tappan, New Jersey:
Fireside ), 320 pages. ISBN 0671631322.
*James R. Beerbower (1968). "Search for the Past: An Introduction to Paleontology" (Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey:Prentice-Hall ), 512 pages.
* R. S. Boardman and others (1985). "Fossil Invertebrates".
*British Museum of Natural History (1969). "British Palaeozoic Fossils" (London, England: British Museum of Natural History).
* Euan N. K. Clarkson (1998). "Invertebrate Palaeontology and Evolution" (London, England:Allen and Unwin ), 468 pages. ISBN 9780632052387.
*Peter Doyle (1996), "Understanding Fossils: An Introduction to Invertebrate Paleontology" (Hoboken, New Jersey:John Wiley & Sons ), 426 pages. ISBN 0471963518.
*Carroll Lane Fenton andMildred Adams Fenton (1958); updated by Patricia Vickers Rich and Thomas Hewitt Rich (1997). "The Fossil Book: A Record of Prehistoric Life" (Garden City, New York: Doubleday andCourier Dover Publishing ), from 482 to 760 pages. ISBN 0486293718.
* W. R. Hamilton and others (1974). "A Guide to Minerals, Rocks and Fossils" (London, England:Hamlyn Publishing Group Ltd. ), 320 pages.
*W. B. Harland (1967). "The Fossil Record" (London, England:Geological Society of London ), 827 pages.
* V. Lehmann and G. Hillmer (1983). "Fossil Invertebrates" (Cambridge, England:Cambridge University Press ).
* Harold L. Levin (1998), "Ancient Invertebrates and Their Living Relatives" (Boston:Prentice-Hall ), 358 pages. ISBN 9780137489558.
* William H. Matthews III (1962). "Fossils: An Introduction to Prehistoric Life" (New York:Barnes and Noble ), 337 pages.
* Helmut Mayr (1992). "A Guide to Fossils" (New York:Longman, Harlow ).
*Raymond C. Moore and others (1952). "Invertebrate Fossils" (New York:McGraw-Hill ), 776 pages. ISBN 00704302.
* J. W. Murray, editor (1985). "Atlas of Invertebrate Macrofossils" (Princeton:Princeton University Press ), 256 pages.
*Douglas Palmer (2004), "Fossils" (London, England:Dorling Kindersley ).
* Frank H. T. Rhodes and others (1962). "Fossils: A Guide to Prehistoric Life" (New York:Golden Nature Guide ), 242 pages.
*Henry Woodburn Shimer andRobert Rakes Shrock (1944/1983). "Index Fossils of North America" (Cambridge, Massachusetts: Massachusetts Institute of Technology Press), 837 pages.
* Robert Rakes Shrock and W. H. Twenhofel (1953). "Invertebrate Paleontology" (New York: McGraw-Hill).
* Ronald Singer (2000), "Encyclopedia of Paleontology " (London, England:Routledge ), 1,467 pages. ISBN 1884964966.
*Ida Thompson (1982/2004). "National Audubon Society Field Guide to North American Fossils" (New York:Alfred A. Knopf ), 846 pages.
*James W. Valentine (2004), "On the Origins of Phyla" (Chicago: University of Chicago Press). 608 pages. ISBN 0-226-84548-6. A discussion focusing on invertebrates during the Paleozoic era.
* Cyril Walker and David Ward (2002). "Smithsonian Handbook of Fossils" (London, England: Dorling Kindersley), 320 pages.See also
External links
* [http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/phyla/metazoasy.html A colorful, illustrated taxonomy of extinct "and" living invertebrate Metazoa] by the
University of California Museum of Paleontology .
* [http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/phyla/metazoafr.html The invertebrate fossil record illustrated colorfully for Metazoa] provided by the U.C. Museum of Paleontology.
* [http://evolution.berkeley.edu/evolibrary/article/0_0_0/evo_04 Educational and colorful introduction to the three domains of the Tree of Life] -- as well as to the topic of "Understanding Evolution" -- sponsored by the U.C. Museum of Paleontology.
* [http://www.paleoportal.org/ An introduction to fossils] byThe Paleontology Portal , a project of four American institutions funded by theNational Science Foundation .
* [http://www.paleoportal.org/index.php?globalnav=fossil_gallery§ionnav=taxon&taxon_id=15 The introduction to "invertebrate" fossils] provided by The Paleontology Portal.
* [http://www.peabody.yale.edu/collections/ip/ Thousands of online pictures of invertebrate fossils.] sponsored by thePeabody Museum atYale University .
* [http://tolweb.org/Animals/2374 The taxonomy of the Metazoa Kingdom of animals] provided byThe Tree of Life Project .
* [http://www.paleo.ku.edu/treatise.html Home site of the many volumes of the "Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology ", ] a site sponsored by bothThe Paleontological Institute at theUniversity of Kansas and theGeological Society of America .
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