Harman Patil (Editor)

Thectardis

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Kingdom
  
Animalia (?)

Rank
  
Genus

Phylum
  
Thectardis httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Species
  
T. avalonensisClapham et al. 2004

Similar
  
Bradgatia, Rangeomorph, Charniodiscus, Pectinifrons, Charnia

the evolution of life thectardis avalonensis


Thectardis avalonensis is a triangular-shaped member of the Ediacara biota, dating from 575 to 565 million years ago. The organism took the form of an elongated cone with a central depression, and its apex was anchored to the substrate.

Contents

Morphology

The fossils take the form of a triangle with a central depression, suggesting that the original organism was conical. The diameter to height ratio of the organism is roughly constant in each location at 1 to 3 in the younger beds, and from 1 to 2.5 in the older beds. The constant ratio suggests that it grew by adding to its body at the base of the cone. The triangle has a raised margin about a quarter of the width of the triangle. The interior either is blank, depressed, or has some vague transverse markings. The impression occurs in the upper bed rather than the lower surface.

Occurrence

205 specimens of Thectardis are known, from two bedding surfaces, separated by 2 km and 10 million years at Mistaken Point, Newfoundland.

Thectardis bearing bedding surfaces also contain Charnia and Ivesheadia.

Ecology

Water currents knocked down the triangles in the same direction, and where they fall on top of other objects they flex over the top. When alive, the organism probably stuck to the microbial mats that bound the Ediacaran sea floor, standing on their tips like a pin in a pin cushion, so that the organism would have resembled an inverted cone. They probably fed on suspended particles. As there is no evidence for a holdfast anchoring them to the sea floor, it remains a matter of speculation how they were attached.

Etymology

The generic name Thectardis is derived from the Greek thektos, sharp-pointed, and ardis, arrow-point. The specific name derives from the Avalon Peninsula, where it was found. Thus, Thectardis avalonensis translates as "sharp arrow-point of Avalon (Peninsula)."

References

Thectardis Wikipedia