Well Preserved Sponge Fossil Crumillospongia from Utah

Name: Crumillospongia sp.

Phylum Porifera; Class Demospongia, Subclass Ceractinomorpha, Family Hazeliidae

Age: Middle Cambrian

Size (25.4mm=1 inch): 20 mm and 15 mm long by 13 mm and 10 mm across on a 100 mm by 75 mm matrix pair

Location: Wheeler Formation, Millard County, Utah

Code: CB021

Price: $195 - sold


CrumillospongiaThe Demosponge Crumillospongia belong to the family Hazeliidae. Because no attachment structures have ever been found, it remains unclear whether or not this early poriferan lived attached to the seafloor. Crumillospongia are somewhat rare in the Middle Cambrian of Utah, and very rare in the Burgess Shale. The Crumillospongia sponges on this plate have unusually good contrast, and are all the more desirable due to the fact that both the part and counterpart are preserved.

Sponge fossils from the Cambrian Explosion are found in various Cambrian sites in North America, most notably the Burgess Shale of Canada, and the Cambrian strata of Utah, like this specimen. Many sponges are also described from the Chengjiang biota of China. Sponges are believed to have undergone repeated radiations in the Phanerozoic, and probably attained their largest diversity in the Cretaceous.

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