Mobergellans were one of the first Cambrian skeletal groups to be recognized yet have long remained one of the most problematic in terms of biological function and affinity. Characterized by a disc-shaped, phosphatic sclerite, the most distinctive character of the group is a prominent set of internal scars, interpreted as representing sites of former muscle attachment. Predominantly based on muscle scar distribution, mobergellans have been compared to brachiopods, bivalves and monoplacophorans; however, a recurring theory that the sclerites acted as an operculum remains untested. Rather than correlate the number of muscle scars between taxa, here we focus on the percentage of the inner surface shell area that the scars constitute. We invest...
The Palaeozoic form-taxon Lobopodia encompasses a diverse range of soft-bodied ‘legged worms’ known ...
Although fossil evidence suggests that various animal groups were able to move actively through thei...
13 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. 12-13)."The principal shell layers of N...
Mobergellans were one of the first Cambrian skeletal groups to be recognized yet have long remained ...
The restricted, exclusively terrestrial distribution of modern Onychophora contrasts strikingly with...
New morphological features of the mobergellan Discinella micans (Billings, 1871) from the lower Camb...
Wiwaxiids are a problematic group of scale-covered lophotrochozoans known from Cambrian Stages 3–5. ...
Soft tissue preservation is reported from Upper Devonian deposits of the Holy Cross Mountains, centr...
Nectocaridids are soft-bodied Cambrian organisms that have been controversially interpreted as primi...
The stem-group priapulid Ottoia Walcott, 1911, is the most abundant worm in the mid-Cambrian Burgess...
Author Posting. © Nature Publishing Group, 2006. This is the author's version of the work. It is po...
The soft-bodied Cambrian organism Wiwaxia poses a taxonomic conundrum. Its imbricated dorsal sclerit...
Wiwaxia is a bizarre metazoan that has been interpreted as a primitive mollusc and as a polychaete a...
© 2015 Parry et al. Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons ...
Hyoliths are abundant and globally distributed ‘shelly’ fossils that appear early in the Cambrian pe...
The Palaeozoic form-taxon Lobopodia encompasses a diverse range of soft-bodied ‘legged worms’ known ...
Although fossil evidence suggests that various animal groups were able to move actively through thei...
13 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. 12-13)."The principal shell layers of N...
Mobergellans were one of the first Cambrian skeletal groups to be recognized yet have long remained ...
The restricted, exclusively terrestrial distribution of modern Onychophora contrasts strikingly with...
New morphological features of the mobergellan Discinella micans (Billings, 1871) from the lower Camb...
Wiwaxiids are a problematic group of scale-covered lophotrochozoans known from Cambrian Stages 3–5. ...
Soft tissue preservation is reported from Upper Devonian deposits of the Holy Cross Mountains, centr...
Nectocaridids are soft-bodied Cambrian organisms that have been controversially interpreted as primi...
The stem-group priapulid Ottoia Walcott, 1911, is the most abundant worm in the mid-Cambrian Burgess...
Author Posting. © Nature Publishing Group, 2006. This is the author's version of the work. It is po...
The soft-bodied Cambrian organism Wiwaxia poses a taxonomic conundrum. Its imbricated dorsal sclerit...
Wiwaxia is a bizarre metazoan that has been interpreted as a primitive mollusc and as a polychaete a...
© 2015 Parry et al. Open Access This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons ...
Hyoliths are abundant and globally distributed ‘shelly’ fossils that appear early in the Cambrian pe...
The Palaeozoic form-taxon Lobopodia encompasses a diverse range of soft-bodied ‘legged worms’ known ...
Although fossil evidence suggests that various animal groups were able to move actively through thei...
13 p. : ill. ; 26 cm.Includes bibliographical references (p. 12-13)."The principal shell layers of N...