.52" Edrioasteroid (Isorophus) On Brachiopod - Fairfield, Ohio

This is a .52" wide Edrioasteroid (Isorophus cincinnatiensis) preserved on top of a brachiopod fossil from the McMillan Formation in Cincinnati, Ohio. Edrioasteroids were known to use brachiopod and mollusk shells as hard substrates for attachment, often being found still attached.

Edrioasteroids are an extinct class of echinoderms. Distantly related to starfish and sea urchins, they have a body laid out in a pentaradial (five-fold symmetry) pattern. They also had a water vascular system and a skeleton made of calcite plates. They were filter feeders who lived permanently attached to an object or the seafloor. Some are thought to have had short stems like crinoids, but most lived flat on whatever object they had attached to as larvae. Edrioasteroids appear in the Cambrian Period about 515 million years ago. Their diversity peaked during the Late Ordovician Period. By about 275 million years ago, during the Permian Period, edrioasteroids are extinct.

Edrioasteroids were small organisms from a few millimeters to a couple centimeters wide. They look like a tiny cushion attached to a substrate. The mouth was in the center of the theca (body) and from it, five ridges radiate out in a pentaradial pattern. These ambulacra channel food along the body to the mouth. There is little fossil evidence of how this was done, but by looking at modern echinoderms, it is likely Edrioasteroids had cilia or tube feet along the ambulacra that moved the food to the mouth. The ambulacra radiate out from the mouth in either straight lines, or curving to form a whorl. Usually they all curve in the same direction, but in a few species they curve in different directions.
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DETAILS
SPECIES
Isorophus cincinnatiensis
LOCATION
Cincinnati, Ohio
FORMATION
McMillan Formation
SIZE
Edrioasteroid .52" wide. Entire specimen 1.7 x 1.2"
CATEGORY
SUB CATEGORY
ITEM
#135586
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