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Floricolumnus
Palaeobiology of Floricolumnus (col.) girvanensis Donovan & Clark (Crinoidea; Silurian) from the Girvan district, Ayrshire
Slab of skeletal packstone from the upper portion of the upper shaly member...
INSIGHTS INTO THE TAXONOMY AND PALEOECOLOGY OF THE ‘BEAD BED' CRINOID (ECHINODERMATA: CRINOIDEA) BASED ON NEW MATERIAL FROM THE LOWER SILURIAN BRASSFIELD FORMATION OF EAST-CENTRAL KENTUCKY
Close-up photographs of typical beads, the cog-wheel shaped remains of the ...
Articulated Floricolumnus (col.) dististeles arranged into coiled attachm...
( a, b ) Floricolumnus (col.) girvanensis Donovan & Clark 1992 , BM...
Floricolumnus (col.) girvanensis Donovan & Clark 1992 , episkeletozo...
Floricolumnus (col.) girvanensis Donovan & Clark 1992 , nodal column...
Arm material from same locality (64K) and bedding plane as the articulated ...
Sequence boundaries and chronostratigraphic gaps in the Llandovery of Ohio and Kentucky: The record of early Silurian paleoceanographic events in east-central North America
Crinoids from the Silurian of the British Isles. Unless stated otherwise, s...
A field guide to the Silurian Echinodermata of the British Isles: Part 2 – Crinoidea, minor groups and discussion
SURVIVING METAMORPHISM: TAPHONOMY OF FOSSIL ASSEMBLAGES IN MARBLE AND CALC-SILICATE SCHIST
The role of preservation on the quantification of morphology and patterns of disparity within Paleozoic echinoderms
Late Ordovician crinoids from the Anti-Atlas region of Morocco
Abstract The crinoid fauna of the Late Ordovician (Sandbian and Katian) of Morocco is sparse, but diverse. The one previously described species, Rosfacrinus robustus Le Menn & Spjeldnaes, 1996 , is now known to be part of an assemblage of at least 10 species, including the new taxa Iocrinus ouzammoui sp. nov. (Disparida), Superlininicrinus advorsa gen. et sp. nov., Isthloucrinus praecursor gen. et a sp. nov. (Cladida) and Euptychocrinus ? atelis sp. nov. (Camerata). The fauna also includes an additional species of Iocrinus , and several camerates including Trichinocrinus sp. and a monobathrid with probable affinities to the Tanaocrinidae. Undeterminable specimens of demonstrably different taxa are described as far as possible. The fauna includes genera previously known from Laurentia and Avalonia, implying unexpected latitudinal dispersal, together with evidence for substantial endemic diversification among cladids and camerates. Several of the taxa have unusual plate arrangements, including a mosaic of primitive and derived characters; this implies that early crinoid diversification was not limited to tropical carbonate facies. The fauna remains poorly known, with low numbers of specimens, and future collecting is likely to increase the diversity significantly.