Xenocrinus
baeri
Crinoids (sea lilies) are sessile, benthic,
filter-feeding, stalked echinoderms that are relatively common in the marine
fossil record. Crinoids are also a
living group, but are relatively uncommon in modern oceans. A crinoid is
essentially a starfish-on-a-stick. The stick, or stem, is composed of
numerous stacked columnals, like small poker chips. Stems and individual
columnals are the most commonly encountered crinoid fossils in the field.
Intact, fossilized crinoid heads (crowns, calices, cups) are unusual.
Why? Upon death, the crinoid body starts disintegrating very
rapidly. The soft tissues holding the skeletal pieces together decay and
the skeleton falls apart.
Below are photos of a limestone slab from the Upper
Ordovician of southwestern Ohio with dozens of intact crinoids (heads attached
to stems). This is a monospecific assemblage of the camerate crinoid Xenocrinus
baeri (Meek, 1872) (Animalia, Echinodermata, Crinoidea, Monobathrida,
Xenocrinidae). This fossil assemblage represents sudden burial of a
crinoid thicket by a storm event. The limestone is channelform, and the
surface facing the viewer is the underside (= base of channel).
Stratigraphy: Whitewater Formation, upper Richmondian Stage, upper Cincinnatian
Series, upper Upper Ordovician.
Xenocrinus baeri (Meek, 1872) crinoids in fossiliferous
limestone from the Whitewater Formation (upper Upper Ordovician) of Warren
County, southwestern Ohio, USA.
Collected & owned by Mark Peter. Preparation by Tom Johnson.
Xenocrinus baeri (Meek, 1872) crinoids in fossiliferous
limestone from the Whitewater Formation (upper Upper Ordovician) of Warren
County, southwestern Ohio, USA.
Collected & owned by Mark Peter. Preparation by Tom Johnson.
Xenocrinus baeri (Meek, 1872) crinoids in fossiliferous
limestone from the Whitewater Formation (upper Upper Ordovician) of Warren
County, southwestern Ohio, USA.
Collected & owned by Mark Peter. Preparation by Tom Johnson.
Xenocrinus baeri (Meek, 1872) crinoids in fossiliferous
limestone from the Whitewater Formation (upper Upper Ordovician) of Warren
County, southwestern Ohio, USA.
Collected & owned by Mark Peter. Preparation by Tom Johnson.
Xenocrinus baeri (Meek, 1872) crinoids in fossiliferous
limestone from the Whitewater Formation (upper Upper Ordovician) of Warren
County, southwestern Ohio, USA.
Collected & owned by Mark Peter. Preparation by Tom Johnson.