- Scolecodonts
A scolecodont is the jaw of a polychaete annelid, a common type of
fossil -producingsegmented worm useful ininvertebrate paleontology . Scolecodonts are common and diversemicrofossil s, which range from theCambrian period (around half a billion years ago at the start of thePaleozoic era) to the present. However, scolecodonts are reported most commonly fromOrdovician ,Silurian andDevonian marine deposits of thePaleozoic era.Relatedly, more problematic
worm -likefossil s have been described in even older,Neoproterozoic era deposits in theEdiacaran Hills of southern Australia and in mid-Cambrian deposits ofBurgess shale in British Columbia.Since the other classes of annelids (specifically, the
earthworm s andleech es) lack hard parts, only the sea-dwelling polychaetes are frequently represented in thefossil record . Polychaetes are commonly fossilized due to theirchitin ous teeth and their dwelling tubes made of durablecalcite (acalcium carbonate ), hardenedmucus (a.k.a. parchment), and/orchitin -like cement.Scolecodonts belonging to the
extinct families Atraktoprionidae, Hadoprionidae, Kalloprionidae, Mochtyellidae, Paulinitidae, Polychaetaspidae, Ramphoprionidae, Rhytiprionidae, Skalenoprionidae, Symmetroprionidae, Xanioprionidae, and the still-extant (living) family Oenonidae (which includes the Arabellidae) are known fromSilurian rocks in Scotland. Scolecodonts representing the present-day families Onuphidae and Dorvilleidae first appeared inMesozoic era deposits.External links
* [http://scolecodonts.net scolecodonts.net] including complete scientific bibliography, lists of fossil genera and species, and selection of images
* [http://scolecodonts.graptolite.net graptolite.net] Piotr Mierzejewski's page on microfossils
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