Fine Tremataspis mammillata Primitive Jawless Fish

with Both Plates Preserved

Tremataspis mammillata

Class Osteostraci, Cephalaspidiformes, Tremataspidae

Geological Time: Upper Silurian, Middle Ludlovian Stage

Size (25.4 mm = 1 inch): Fossil is 25 mm by 21 mm with 10 mm by 8 mm on reverse on a 125 mm by 110 mm matrix

Fossil Site: Island of Oesel, Estonia

Fossil Code: UKF198

Price: Sold


Tremataspis mammillataThe Osteostracii are a primitive group of jawless fish. This one is known as Tremataspis and comes from the Silurian of Estonia. It had a rounded shield that covered most of the body and was presumed to have aided the fish in plowing through the substrate in search of food. Notice the centrally-located eye holes, single nostril , sensory fields and ornamentation. The shield was one solid piece, and as such most likely did not grow as the animal aged. Presumably the larvae had no such protection, growing a shield only once they had reached the mature stage. This one shows both the dorsal and ventral sides. While the dorsal side is essentially complete, the ventral side preserves some 15% of the original shell with more possibly present still in matrix.

Fish Fossils Sales


Fossil Mall Navigation:
l Home l Fossils for Sale Map l Museum and Rare Fossils l How to Buy Fossils l

Navigate by Fossil Category:
l Trilobites
l Ammonites l Fish Fossils l Invertebrate Fossils l
l Crinoids and Echinoderms l Insect Fossils l Dinosaur and Reptile Fossils l
l Cambrian Explosion Fossils l Plant Fossils l Stromatolites l
l Vertebrate Fossils l Fossil Amber l Trace & Ichnofossils l

l Fossils and Paleotological Science Information l