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NICE Fossil Sea Life BLASTOID Echinoderm Mineral Specimen INDIANA w/ ID card

$ 1.55

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Item must be returned within: 30 Days
  • Restocking Fee: No
  • Refund will be given as: Money Back
  • Return shipping will be paid by: Seller
  • All returns accepted: Returns Accepted

    Description

    This listing is for a really fascinating blastoid specimen in a display jar, including an info card providing information about blastoid and the location this specimen came from. This kit is great for avid fossil and mineral specimen collectors or beginners. It would be a perfect gift set for getting someone interested in fossil collecting and science. The 1 centimeter scale cube is for size comparison only. It is not included in the sale. The photos are of several different specimens, but this listings is only for one specimen with an info card. The photos show multiple specimens to give a representation of the variety of shapes and colors in these specimens.
    I offer a shipping discount for customers who combine their payments for multiple purchases into one payment! The discount is regular shipping price for the first item and just 50 cents for each additional item! To be sure you get your shipping discount just make sure all the items you want to purchase are in your cart. Auctions you win are added to your cart automatically. For any "buy it now" items or second chance offers, be sure to click the "add to cart" button, NOT the "buy it now" button. Once all of your items are in your cart just pay for them from your cart and the combined shipping discount should be applied automatically.
    I offer a money back guarantee on every item I sell.
    If you are not 100% happy with your purchase just send me a message to let me know and I will buy back the item for your full purchase price.
    Hi there. I am selling this really amazing Pentremites Blastoid echinoderm fossil. I bought it at a gem show in Arizona and it was found in Indiana. It is really amazing, and very detailed. It would be a great idea to have in a classroom for a teacher, or to have as a part of a gem and mineral and fossil collection, It was one of the nicest and most detailed ones that I have ever seen. I have never come across one that looked so complete and perfect. These amazing animals are related to star fish and urchins (I also sell fossilized urchins: look for my auction)! THE DETAIL OF THESE SPECIMENS IS AMAZING!!!
    It's really interesting and I hope it finds a good home out there.
    Blastoid
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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    Blastoids
    Temporal range: Ordovician - Permian
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    Pentremites Glen Dean Fm KY.jpg
    Pentremites godoni, a blastoid from the Lower Carboniferous of Illinois.
    Scientific classification
    Kingdom:
    Animalia
    Phylum:
    Echinodermata
    Subphylum:
    Blastozoa
    Class:
    Blastoidea
    Say, 1825
    Orders
    Fissiculata
    Spiraculata
    Incertae sedis:
    †Macurdablastus
    "Blastoidea", from Ernst Haeckel's Art Forms of Nature, 1904
    Blastoids (class Blastoidea) are an extinct type of stemmed echinoderm, often referred to as sea buds.[1] They first appear, along with many other echinoderm classes, in the Ordovician period, and reached their greatest diversity in the Mississippian subperiod of the Carboniferous period. However, blastoids may have originated in the Cambrian. Blastoids persisted until their extinction at the end of Permian, about 250 million years ago. Although never as diverse as their contemporary relatives, the crinoids, blastoids are common fossils, especially in many Mississippian-age rocks.
    Contents
    1
    Description
    2
    Taxonomy
    3
    References
    4
    External links
    Description
    Like most echinoderms, blastoids were protected by a set of interlocking plates of calcium carbonate, which formed the main body, or theca. In life, the theca of a typical blastoid was attached to a stalk or column made up of stacked disc-shaped plates. The other end of the column was attached to the ocean floor by a holdfast, very much like stalked crinoids. The stalk was usually relatively short, and in some species, was absent, with the holdfast being attached directly to the base of the theca.
    The mouth was located at the summit of the theca. Radiating like flower petals from the center were five food grooves, or ambulacra. Each ambulacrum had many long, thin, fine structures called brachioles, which were used to trap food particles and bring them to the mouth. Brachioles were delicate structures, and in fossils are not usually preserved in place. A series of five spiracle plates surrounded the star-shaped mouth, which included the anus, mouth and entrances to a set of five complex, folded respiratory organs known as hydrospires. These spiracles prevented mixing of the various fluids. Waste elimination was through the anispiracle, an opening formed by the fusing of anus and adjacent spiracles.
    Pentremites godoni, a blastoid from the Lower Carboniferous of Illinois; basal view of theca.
    Like crinoids, blastoids were high-level, stalked suspension feeders (feeding mainly on planktonic organisms) that inhabited clear-to-silty, moderately agitated ocean waters from shelf to basin. The food gathering system of blastoids consisted of several types of ambulacra. Food entered the brachiolar ambulacra, was transferred to the side ambulacra through the brachiolar pit, then transferred to the main (median) ambulacra, and finally entered the mouth. Each of these ambulacra was roofed by cover plates. The cover plates of the brachiolar groove were movable and could open, allowing food to enter, or close as needed. Other cover plates may also have been movable.
    Taxonomy
    See also: List of echinodermata orders
    Blastoids are assumed to have evolved from the Cystoids. Blastoids are subdivided into two orders: Fissiculata, which are characterized by direct entrance to the individual hydrospires by way of slits; and Spiraculata, which are characterized by indirect entrance to the hydrospires through canals by way of pores. The earliest blastoid yet found, Macurdablastus from the Middle Ordovician of Tennessee, cannot be classified as either order.