2009 Portland GSA Annual Meeting (18-21 October 2009)

Paper No. 3
Presentation Time: 2:00 PM

CAMBROTHYRA AMPULLIFORMIS, AN UNUSUAL COELOSCLERITOPHORAN FROM THE LOWER CAMBRIAN OF SHAANXI PROVINCE, CHINA


MOORE, John L., Department of Earth Science, University of California, Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, PORTER, Susannah M., Earth Science, University of California at Santa Barbara, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, STEINER, Michael, Freie Universität Berlin, Malteserstraße 74-100, Berlin, 12249, Germany and LI, Guoxiang, Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Nanjing, 210008, China, jlmoore@umail.ucsb.edu

Cambrothyra ampulliformis is a jar- or vase-shaped fossil known from the Lower Cambrian of Shaanxi and Hubei provinces, China. It has been interpreted as a protistan test or cyst or a metazoan sclerite. A large collection of specimens from the Xihaoping Member of the Dengying Formation in southern Shaanxi Province permits its detailed redescription. These fossils are highly variable in shape, but this variation is continuous and does not support the current recognition of multiple species for this material. They were originally hollow, with a restricted basal foramen and a calcareous wall probably composed of fibrous aragonite, which in some cases bore scale-like projections. All of these features support the identification of Cambrothyra as sclerites of a coeloscleritophoran, a problematic group of Cambrian scleritome-bearing metazoans. Furthermore, the walls of Cambrothyra sclerites contain numerous pores, a feature shared with other coeloscleritophorans. Cambrothyra appears to be related to chancelloriids in particular, due to the shared presence of a verruculose texture around the foramen and the absence of mirror-image pairs of asymmetric sclerites. However, unlike chancelloriids, which have rosette-like compound sclerites, the scleritome of Cambrothyra was dominated by isolated sclerites, with only a few pairs and clusters of sclerites and twin sclerites. Consequently, we hypothesize that Cambrothyra forms a clade with other chancelloriids, but represents a basal lineage that plesiomorphically retained isolated sclerites. The morphology of Cambrothyra sclerites, which shares features with both chancelloriids and halkieriids, thus supports the hypothesis that all coeloscleritophorans form a natural group.