Cothurnocystis elizae Carpoid from Scotland

Ordovician Girvan Fauna Collection

Cothurnocystis elizae

Deuterostomata, Class Homalozoa, Order Soluta

Geological Time: Upper Ordovician, Ashgillian Stage

Size (25.4 mm = 1 inch): Theca: 25 mm by 33 mm tall (including appendages) and 27 mm articulated stem; Matrix: 100 mm by 55 mm

Fossil Site: Lady Burn Starfish Beds, Girvan District, Ayrshire, Scotland

Code: UKF156

Price: Sold


Cothurnocystis elizaeDescription: I have recently been able to acquire a number of specimens coming from the famous Upper Ordovician Lady Burn Starfish Beds of the Girvan District of Scotland. While it is the most important starfish locality in the British Isles, it also contains a diverse representation of trilobite crinoids, carpoids and others. Specimens from the locality are not often made available, so this divers grouping is most uncommon. This plate contains an excellent example of the carpoid Cothurnocystis elizae. The carpoids are one of the most contentious groups of fossil organisms known. While they have been studied for over 150 years, their unique character combinations have caused a number of disputes over both their paleobiology and relationships. While some place them in the Echinodermata, their lack of pentaradial symmetry calls that placement into question. Additionally many carpoids are thought to have possessed gill slits (this one has been so interpreted), a feature characteristic of chordates and hemichaordates. Many possess one or two “appendages” which have been interpreted variously as feeding tubes, tails with notocords and muscular feet. The carpoid body was supported by a skeleton of calcitic plates like those found in modern Echinoderms. Some believe that a carpoid may have been the common ancestor between Echinoderms and Vertebrates. It is important to note the carpoids differ from ALL other animals, living and extinct, in that many are completely asymmetrical. With so much debate over assignment of the appendages to specific functions, how can one come to a conclusion about their assignment in the Tree of Life? This one is rarely offered for sale.

Fossils for Sale

click fossil pictures to enlarge


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