Ausia fenestrata explained

Ausia fenestrata is a curious Ediacaran period (635 – 539 million years ago)[1] fossil represented by only one specimen 5 cm long from the Nama Group, a Vendian to Cambrian group of stratigraphic sequences deposited in the Nama foreland basin in central and southern Namibia. It has similarity to Burykhia from Ediacaran (Vendian) siliciclastic sediments exposed on the Syuzma River of Arkhangelsk Oblast, northwest Russia.[2] This fossil is of the form of an elongate bag-like sandstone cast (Nama-type preservation) tapering to a cone on one end. The surface of the fossil is covered with oval depressions ("windows") regularly spaced over the surface in the manner of concentric/parallel rows. The taxonomic identity of Ausia is unresolved.

Interpretations

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Stratigraphic Chart 2022 . International Stratigraphic Commission . February 2022 . 25 April 2022.
  2. Web site: IGCP 493 Annual Report 2003 . 2008-11-20 . https://web.archive.org/web/20080721220025/http://www.geosci.monash.edu.au/precsite/docs/reports/canadian-ar03.pdf . 2008-07-21 . dead .
  3. Gary C. Williams . Aspects of the Evolutionary Biology of Pennatulacean Octocorals .
  4. M. A. Fedonkin (1996). "Ausia as an ancestor of archeocyathans, and other sponge-like organisms". In: Enigmatic Organisms in Phylogeny and Evolution. Abstracts. Moscow, Paleontological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, p. 90-91.
  5. Mark A. S. McMenamin (1998). "The Sand Menagerie". In: The Garden of Ediacara: Discovering the First Complex Life. Columbia University Press. New York. pp.11-46.
  6. Fedonkin . M. A. . Vickers-Rich . P. . Swalla . B. J. . Trusler . P. . Hall . M. . A new metazoan from the Vendian of the White Sea, Russia, with possible affinities to the ascidians . Paleontological Journal . 46 . 1–11 . 2012 . 10.1134/S0031030112010042 . 128415270 .
  7. Vickers-Rich P. (2007). "Chapter 4. The Nama Fauna of Southern Africa". In: Fedonkin M.A., Gehling J.G., Grey K., Narbonne G.M., Vickers-Rich P. The Rise of Animals: Evolution and Diversification of the Kingdom Animalia, Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 69-87
  8. M.A. Fedonkin, P. Vickers Rich, B. Swalla, P. Trusler, M. Hall. (2008). "A Neoproterozoic chordate with possible affinity to the ascidians: New fossil evidence from the Vendian of the White Sea, Russia and its evolutionary and ecological implications". HPF-07 Rise and fall of the Ediacaran (Vendian) biota. International Geological Congress - Oslo 2008.
  9. Palaeontographica Canadiana. Possible Ediacaran ancestry of the halkieriids. Dzik, J.. 2011. 21. 205–218.