- Inaria
Taxobox
color = #taxobox colour|incertae sedis
name = "Inaria"
fossil_range =Ediacaran
image_width = 250px
image_caption = "Inaria karli" with "Albumares "
domain =Eukaryota
phylum_authority = Hatschek, 1888
phylum = ?Cnidaria
classis = ?Anthozoa "Inaria" is an Ediacaran
fossil . It is found in the Chace Range inAustralia , and theWhite Sea area inRussia .It has radial symmetry and has been described as a tentacle-less
cnidarian . The organism had a sac-like body that resembled a cluster of garlic or conical flask in shape, with a broad bulbous base embedded in the mud, and a tube extending above the sea floor. The body cavity of "Inaria" was a single chamber with the inner surface of the body wall forming deep invaginations that partitioned the cavernous stomach into several septa. In its deep environment it seems that it was the only species."Inaria" was found in lower shoreface muds.
Australia Post issued a 50 cent stamp featuring "Inaria" on21 April 2005 in a series entitled Creatures of the slime.One species known as "Inaria karli" was named by Jim Gehling in 1987. He published in "A Cnidarian of Actinian-Grade from the Ediacaran Pound Subgroup of South Australia". Alcheringa 12: 299-314.
References
*D. Grazhdankin (2000)"The Ediacaran genus Inaria : a taphonomic/morphodynamic analysis". Neues Jb. Geol. Paläont. Abh. 216: 1-34.
* McMenamin, Mark A. S. The Garden of Ediacara New York: Columbia University Press, 1998. ISBN 0-231-10559-2
External links
* [http://www.monash.edu/news/monashmemo/stories/20050427/stamps.html stamp artist]
* [http://www.looksmartscience.com/p/articles/mi_qa4067/is_200404/ai_n9400860 Patterns of Distribution]
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