Bryozoan Fossil Limestone Screw Skeleton mm 17 x 7 Archimedes regina Sea Invertebrata Bryozoa Lophophorates Fenestrata Extinct Prehistoric Paleozoic Carboniferous Collectibles Paleontology Museum.
Pleasant fossil find of Bryozoa Ectoprocta Fenestellidae from the Carboniferous Mississipian of Alabama, representative collectible specimen of good quality and in excellent condition, with evident and appreciable details of the shape of the screw exoskeleton, fragment of the calcareous mesh of the encrusting calcified arborescent column of which it was a member when it was alive.
Only a piece, as in photo.
Also available in lots, at this link.
You can find in our catalog equipment cardboard containers and various transparent plexiglas boxes where to store and protect this very fragile fossil, or plasticine to fix it on the bottom in a vertical position.
Archimedes is a genus of Fenetrata (or Fenestrida) Bryozoans with calcified skeleton, belonging to the Fenestellidae family (order Stenolaemata).
It was called Archimedes in 1838 because of its
corkscrew shape, in analogy with the screw of Archimede, a type of water pump that inspired the modern naval propellers. These forms are quite common as fossils but are extinct by the Permian.
These bryozoans lived from the Carboniferous period to the Permian period (345 to 268 million years ago), when this kind became extinct.
The most common remains are fragments of the
limestone mesh detached from the central structure. Samples in which the network remains attached to the central structure are rare. Like other bryozoans, Archimedes formed
colonies; within the branches, the neighboring individuals were in contact through small channels. Most of these fossils are distributed in Europe and North America, but have also been found in sediments in Afghanistan, Canada, Russia and Australia.
The phylum
Bryozoa or, more correctly,
Ectoprocta, is composed of small aquatic
invertebrates, almost exclusively marine, living in
arborescent colonies anchored to a submerged substrate. They are also called
encrusting organisms because they cause fouling on the hulls of ships and on submerged marine structures.
The name derives from the Greek bryon = moss and zoion = animal, since the appearance of the colonies resembles that of the
moss.
The Bryozoans live on rocky bottoms, but also sandy and silty, prefer tropical marine environments, however for their worldwide distribution they can be called cosmopolitan.
A colony of bryozoans is made up of individuals reaching a maximum of half a millimeter. Everyone lives enclosed in an elongated double-walled
shell, calcareous or chitinous, sometimes closed by an operculum.
Each individual is made up of a part that is permanently inside the case, and one that emerges, in the shape of an
polyp, with a raised ridge, the lophophorus (they are also called
Lophophorates, like the
Brachiopods), which bears a crown of
tentacles around the buccal opening, which act as organs for feeding, breathing and perception of external stimuli.
The
lophophorus in the marine bryozoons has a circular shape, while in those of fresh water it is shaped like a horseshoe. They feed on plankton and organic particles that they capture by filtering the water.
They have a U-shaped digestive tract, with the mouth near the anus at the top and stomach and intestine in the lower one.
Colonies are generally
polymorphic, ie they can take on a different shape depending on their function (cleaning, reproduction, defense, etc.).
Bryozoans are generally sexually
hermaphrodites. From the embryo develops a ciliated larva type trocofora, shaped like a flattened cone with an apical tuft of eyelashes. The larvae, after hatching, descend on the sea bed and, with the apex facing downwards, attach themselves to a substrate, founding a new colony for budding.
The Bryozoa also include the
Entoprocta subtype, with mouth and anus opening inside the lophophorus. There is no fossil record of these forms, for they are skeleton-free.
From studies on fossil findings it emerges that the Bryozoans have appeared, with countless species, in the
Cambrian, and had the greatest expansion in the period between the
Ordovician and the
Carboniferous, with the appearance of numerous new species, and in the period between
Jurassic and
Cretaceous.
Currently about
4000 living species are known, most of which dates back to the Paleozoic, and more than
15,000 fossil species.