Solza (animal)
Solza | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Solza margarita |
||||
Temporal occurrence | ||||
Ediacarium | ||||
555 million years | ||||
Locations | ||||
Systematics | ||||
|
||||
Scientific name | ||||
Solza | ||||
Ivantsov , 2004 | ||||
species | ||||
|
Solza is an extinct animal genus of the Ediacarium of uncertain classification that lived about 555 million years ago.
etymology
The generic name Solza refers to the Solsa River , a tributary of the Dwinabusen ( White Sea ) on the Onega Peninsula in northern Russia . The species name margarita comes from the ancient Greek μαργαριτηζ (margarites) meaning pearl .
Initial description
Solza margarita was first scientifically described in 2004 by Andrei Jurjewitsch Iwanzow .
Occurrence
The holotype of Solza comes from the eponymous river. The fossil occurs here in both the Verkhovka Formation and the younger Erga Formation . There are also known finds from the winter coast (Simni Bereg, Arkhangelsk Oblast ).
description
Solza has a flattened cone shape that is inclined to one side. The cone base has an egg-shaped plan. The body dimensions can vary in length between 7.2 and 10.5 millimeters and in width between 5.3 and 8 millimeters. Most fossils, while somewhat distorted, still retain the basic egg shape - suggesting some rigidity in the fossil.
The surface of the fossil is traversed by a network of furrows, which is relatively wide-meshed at the tip of the cone, but narrows and branches towards the edges.
The furrows on the surface are explained differently:
- One interpretation sees them as internal channels of the living organism, which emerge in narrow pores to the surface. These channels may be related to food intake and may represent a filtration system used to hold back microorganisms suspended in the water stream. Only after the organism has died, the furrows are said to have formed over the canals.
- The furrows are also interpreted as textures located on the outer skin of the living organism, which resemble non-mineralized, kneecap-like shell structures, as can also be seen in Kimberella . Recent studies largely follow this point of view.
Way of life
Fossil finds show that Solza was a benthic inhabitant with bilateral symmetry, who ate on the substrate but was still free to move.
Individual evidence
- ^ A b Ivantsov, AY: Paleontological Data on the Possibility of Precambrian Existence of Mollusks . Ed .: Averkii Fyodorov and Havrila Yakovlev. Mollusks: Morphology, Behavior and Ecology. Nova Science Pub Incorporated, 2012, ISBN 978-1-62100-987-0 , pp. 153-179 .
- ↑ Ivantsov, AY, Malakhovskaya, YE and Serezhnikova, EA: Some Problematic Fossils from the Vendian of the Southeastern White Sea Region . In: Paleontological Journal . tape 38 (1) , 2004, p. 1-9 .
- ^ Andrey Y. Ivantsov: Paleontological evidence for the supposed precambrian occurrence of mollusks . In: Paleontological Journal . tape 40 (12) , 2010, pp. 1552-1559 , doi : 10.1134 / S0031030110120105 .
- ↑ Ivantsov, AY and Leonov, MV: The imprints of Vendian animals - unique paleontological objects of the Arkhangelsk region (in Russian) . Arkhangelsk 2009, ISBN 978-5-903625-04-8 , pp. 91 .