Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-p2v8j Total loading time: 0.001 Render date: 2024-06-02T16:35:42.328Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

New specimens of Cyclocystoides scammaphoris (Echinodermata) from the Upper Ordovician rocks of the American midcontinent with implications for cyclocystoid functional morphology

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 June 2023

Dennis R. Kolata*
Affiliation:
Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois, 615 E. Peabody Drive, MC-650, Urbana-Champaign, Illinois 61820, USA
Terry Frank
Affiliation:
10813 Bailey School Road, Festus, Missouri 63028, USA
Asa Kaplan
Affiliation:
Missouri Institute of Natural Science, 2327 W. Farm Road 190, Springfield, Missouri 65810, USA
Thomas E. Guensburg
Affiliation:
IRC, Geology, Field Museum, 1400 S Lake Shore Drive, Chicago, Illinois 60605, USA
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

New specimens of Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, 1982, are here reported from the Upper Ordovician Platteville Formation of northern Illinois, Plattin and Decorah groups of east-central Missouri, and Lebanon Limestone of central Tennessee. These fossils reveal skeletal details that provide insight into the anatomy of cyclocystoids. Of particular significance is a network of channels that likely originate near the center of the central disk and extend along the oral side of the radial plates, bifurcating distally two or three times before entering the radial facets on the proximal surface of each marginal ossicle. From here, the network enters a series of facet canals that extend upward through each marginal ossicle, exiting in a linear row of pores. The canals are very similar in size and distribution to the nerve canals in living echinoderms. The axes of the canals, which number up to 500 in some specimens, and those of the radial ducts project proximally away from the oral surface at an elevation angle of about 25°, apparently forming a network that could have converged within the upper part of the body cavity. This origin and function are made clear by the connection between the channel on each radial plate and the radial facet canal pores within each marginal ossicle.

Type
Articles
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of The Paleontological Society

Introduction

Cyclocystoids are a rare and enigmatic class of echinoderms that range in age from Middle Ordovician (Berg-Madsen, Reference Berg-Madsen1987) to early Carboniferous (Haude and Thomas, Reference Haude, Thomas, Hackler, Heinrich and Krause1994). They possess a low-profile, disk-shaped body surrounded by a prominent ring of stout marginal ossicles bordered on their distal edges by small, imbricate plates. Proximal to the ring of marginal ossicles is a central skeletal framework consisting of numerous small, imbricate, channeled ossicles forming a radial skeleton that branches outward from the center of the disk to the proximal edges of the marginal ossicles. Appressed to the radial plates, on the side opposite the radial channels, are numerous annular plates.

The most comprehensive investigation of cyclocystoids to date is that of Smith and Paul (Reference Smith and Paul1982). Their monographic study includes observations on skeletal morphology, anatomy, growth, functional morphology, mode of life, stratigraphical and geographical distribution, phylogeny, evolution, and systematics. These authors also provide a historical summary of early cyclocystoid investigations, including those by Salter and Billings (Reference Salter and Billings1858), Hall (Reference Hall1872), Bather (Reference Bather and Lankester1900), Raymond (Reference Raymond1913), Begg (Reference Begg1934, Reference Begg1939), Sieverts-Doreck (Reference Sieverts-Doreck1951), Kesling (Reference Kesling1963, Reference Kesling and Moore1966), and Nichols (Reference Nichols1969, Reference Nichols1972). Subsequent investigations have focused largely on cyclocystoid occurrences and diversity of cyclocystoids (Berg-Madsen, Reference Berg-Madsen1987; Haude and Thomas, Reference Haude, Thomas, Hackler, Heinrich and Krause1994; Smith and Wilson, Reference Smith and Wilson1995; Glass et al., Reference Glass, Ausich and Copper2003; Reich and Kutscher, Reference Reich, Kutscher, Harris, Böttger, Walker and Lesser2010; Sprinkle et al., Reference Sprinkle, Reich, Lefebvre, Zamora and Rábano2015; Reich et al., Reference Reich, Sprinkle, Lefebvre, Rössner, Zamora and Rahman2017; Ewin et al., Reference Ewin, Reich, Graham and Cournoyer2019; Müller and Hahn, Reference Müller and Hahn2019; and Ausich and Zehler, Reference Ausich and Zehler2022). Skeletal homologies, functional morphology, and life mode are poorly understood because cyclocystoids are rare as fossils and microscopic details of their skeletons generally are not well preserved.

Well-preserved marginal ossicles of Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul (Reference Smith and Paul1982) from the Platteville Formation of Illinois were described and illustrated by Kolata (Reference Kolata1975) and Smith and Paul (Reference Smith and Paul1982). Recently, additional marginal ossicles have been discovered in beds of marl in the Mifflin Member of the Platteville Formation near Dixon, Illinois. Many of the new ossicles are weathered free from the lime mudstone matrix, unabraded, and reveal microscopic details of the radial ducts, facet canals, lateral and circumferential channels, and stereom. Also examined and reported here are recently discovered specimens of C. scammaphoris from the Plattin and Decorah Groups of east-central Missouri and Lebanon Limestone of central Tennessee. All specimens offer insights into unresolved questions of functional morphology for this cyclocystoid species and for cyclocystoids more broadly.

Materials and methods

Photography

All specimens were photographed with a Canon D60 digital camera. Small specimens (<2 mm) were photographed using a Canon CA6528MP MP-E 65 mm f/2.8 1–5× macro photo lens and larger specimens using a Canon EF-S 60 mm f/2.8 macro USM lens. Focus stacking of images was obtained with an automated macro rail by StackShot, and images were processed with Helicon software. To reveal small skeletal details, many specimens were stained with a wash of diluted non-waterproof black India ink, dried, and coated with ammonium chloride before being photographed.

Repositories and institutional abbreviations

Type, figured, and other specimens examined in this study are deposited in the following institutions: The Center for Paleontology, Illinois Natural History Survey, Prairie Research Institute, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign (ISGS-PAL22) or University of Illinois Geology Department (UI-X) for specimens accessioned pre-2018; Burpee Museum of Natural History, Rockford, Illinois (BMNH); Field Museum of Natural History, Chicago, Illinois (PE).

Systematic paleontology

Phylum Echinodermata Klein, Reference Klein1778
Class Cyclocystoidea Miller and Gurley, Reference Miller and Gurley1895
Family Cyclocystoididae Miller, Reference Miller1882

Remarks

For the most part, we follow the morphologic terminology proposed by Smith and Paul (Reference Smith and Paul1982). Many of their terms are useful as points of reference in the descriptions and interpretations that follow in this report. However, we disagree with their interpretation of living orientation. We apply the terms “oral” to the cupule-bearing surface and “aboral” to the non-cupule-bearing surface to standardize terminology that does not depend on functional or life habit interpretations. For convenience, we refer to the oral surface as “upper” and aboral surface as “lower” as needed when describing relative positions of features within the cyclocystoid skeleton that lie neither on the oral surface nor on the aboral surface.

Genus Cyclocystoides Salter and Billings, Reference Salter and Billings1858

Type species

Cyclocystoides halli Billings in Salter and Billings, Reference Salter and Billings1858 p. 86, pl. X, figs. 2–4, figs. 1, 6, 7 (lectotype GSC 1416a designated by Raymond, Reference Raymond1913) from the Upper Ordovician Cobourg Beds, Ottawa, Canada, by original designation.

Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982
 Figures 1–7

Reference Kolata1975

Cyclocystoides sp. aff. C. halli Billings; Kolata, p. 57, pl. 11, figs. 1–8, pl. 13, figs. 1–4; text-figs. 16, 17.

Reference Smith and Paul1982

C. scammaphoris Smith and Paul; fig. 16 (1), pl. 17 c, e–g, pl. 19, 68–72, 74.

Figure 1. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982 from Grand Detour Member of Platteville Formation, Dixon, Lee County, Illinois. (1, 3, 4) Holotype UI X4956, locality 1: (1) oral surface showing terminal cover plates and peripheral skirt with frontal plates; (3) full oral view of holotype showing peripheral skirt, terminal cover plates, and radial plates; (4) enlargement of holotype showing central opening, primary radial plates, and sutural pores. (2) Paratype UI X4957, locality 4, aboral surface showing flat, pitted surface of marginal ossicles and aboral surface of several terminal cover plates showing central groove. Scale bars = 1 mm.

Figure 3. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982 from Castlewood Limestone Member of Spechts Ferry Formation, Jefferson County, Missouri, locality 6. (1) ISGS-PAL22-41 oral surface of complete ring of marginal ossicles showing pentaradial arrangement of paired three-cupule marginal ossicles with three cupules. (2) ISGS-PAL22-42 oral surface of incomplete ring of marginal ossicles shown with arrows, each unobscured ossicle exhibiting a cupule count of three or four. Scale bars = 1 mm.

Figure 4. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982 from base of Castlewood Limestone Member of Spechts Ferry Formation, Jefferson County, Missouri, locality 6: lateral surface of deeply weathered marginal ossicle ISGS-PAL22-43 showing proximal of radial duct and apparent bifurcated radial facet canal. Scale bar = 1 mm.

Figure 5. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982 from Mifflin Member of Platteville Formation, Dixon, Lee County, Illinois, locality 3. (1–6) Topotype ISGS-PAL22-44, a well-preserved marginal ossicle showing microscopic surface details: (1) lateral surface showing articulation ridges, lateral striae, circumferential channel, lateral channel, and radial facet, with an inset revealing stereom microstructure with extended trabeculae; (2) perspective view showing radial facets; (3) lateral view showing cutaway of internal cupule cavity and radial duct (light gray); red arrow shows axis of radial duct; yellow arrows show network of tissue along axis of radial channels entering facet canals positioned below the terminal radial plate and then projecting upward parallel to axis of radial ducts; network of internal facet canals shown in yellow; aboral surface of central disk consists of radial and interradial (not shown) plates underlain by thin annular plates with central pores that aligns with the sutural pores; (4) proximal side of marginal ossicle showing radial ducts and upper and lower openings of facet canals; (5) cutaway of proximal side of marginal ossicle showing path of internal facet canals in yellow; (6) oral surface of marginal ossicle showing cupules and upper openings of facet canals; upper part of figure is an artistic depiction of the terminal cover plates, channeled radial plates, interradial plates, radial channels, and sutural pores; yellow arrows mark the positions of inferred radial tissue that extended along the channels on the oral surfaces of the radial plates from the center of the disk into the facet canals beneath the terminal cover plates. Scale bar = 1 mm.

Figure 6. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982 from Mifflin Member, Platteville Formation, Dixon, Lee County, Illinois. (1) Paratype UI X–5097, locality 1, proximal surface of a relatively large marginal ossicle showing numerous upper and lower facet canal pores. (2) Topotype ISGS-PAL22-45, locality 2, proximal surface of marginal ossicle showing exposed facet canals connecting upper and lower facet canal pores. (3) Topotype ISGS-PAL22-46, locality 2, proximal side of marginal ossicle showing radial ducts and prominent indentation. (4) Topotype ISGS-PAL22-44, locality 3, distal surface of marginal ossicle showing cupules and the circumferential channel. (5) Paratype ISGS-PAL22-48, locality 4, aboral surface showing marginal ossicles, annular plates, and circlet of primary radial plates. Scale bars = 1 mm.

Figure 7. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982 from Platteville Formation, Dixon, Lee County, Illinois, locality 3: diagrammatic cross section through body center showing reconstruction of marginal ossicles with peripheral skirt, frontal plates, radial ducts, and circumferential and lateral channels as well as oral and aboral orientation. Central disk is composed of radial and interradial plates, annular plates, annular plate pores, and terminal radial plates. Tissue radiating from central ring (yellow) and radial duct tissue (pink) show the implied orientation of tissue projecting up from the facet canals and radial ducts.

Holotype

Partial ring of marginal ossicles with lower disk and peripheral skirt (UI X-4956) from the Grand Detour Member, Platteville Formation, northern Illinois, United States (Kolata, Reference Kolata1975, pl. 11, figs. 2, 4, 8; Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982, figs. 16 (1), 17c, e–g, 19, 68–72, 74).

Occurrence

Mifflin and Grand Detour Members of the Platteville Formation, Turinian Stage, Upper Ordovician Series in north-central Illinois; Zell Member, Macy Limestone Formation, Plattin Group, Turinian Stage, Upper Ordovician Series in eastern Missouri; Spechts Ferry Formation, Decorah Group, Turinian Stage, Upper Ordovician Series in eastern Missouri; and Lebanon Limestone, Stones River Group, Turinian Stage, Upper Ordovician Series in central Tennessee (see Appendix).

Description

Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982 is here redescribed in detail on the basis of new material. Preserved skeletal structures described here include: (1) composite central disk consisting of radial and interradial plates and annular plates, (2) marginal ring of ossicles, and (3) peripheral skirt (Figs. 1–6).

Figure 2. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982 from Lebanon Limestone, Rutherford County, Tennessee, locality 8. (1) Oral view of central disk in specimen PE93328 showing pentaradial arrangement of three-cupule marginal ossicles with three cupules (purple). (2) Enlargement of central disk in specimen PE93328 showing radial (blue) and interradial (yellow) plates, terminal cover plates (green), and sutural pores. Scale bar = 1 mm.

Central disk (Figs. 1.11.4, 2.1, 2.2, 6.5): five or six centrally positioned primary radial plates surrounding depression containing two or three small wedge-shaped plates. Primary radial plates give rise to series of radial plates that bifurcate two or three times distally. Radial plates elongate, imbricate, bifurcate, uniserial with channel on upper surface, and distally connected to marginal ossicles. In holotype (UI X4956), channel is overlain by small, irregularly shaped ossicles (T-shaped plates of Kolata, Reference Kolata1975 and cover plates of Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982). Terminal radial plate (“spear-shaped plate” of Kolata, Reference Kolata1975) domed upward with wide channel on lower surface (Fig. 1.2) and possessing short, lateral projections, giving plate star-shaped appearance. Radial plate series flanked by single series of interradial plates that do not bifurcate. Sutural pores round to ovoid in outline and relatively large; positioned between adjacent radial and interradial plates. Annular plates tightly packed, round to oval in outline, central pore aligning with sutural pores (Fig. 6.5).

Marginal ring (Figs. 1–6): 30 to 32 ossicles in largest specimens (Figs. 2.1, 3.1) but fewer ossicles in small specimens (Fig. 3.2). Marginal ossicle height 80% of length. Oral surface covered with numerous prominent pustules that are largest near ossicle crest; wide gap between adjacent marginal ossicle crests. Typically, two cupules per marginal ossicle, but some specimens have one or as many as five. Specimens possessing complete circlet of marginal ossicles commonly have five evenly spaced groups of ossicles with three cupules that appear to reflect inherent pentaradial symmetry (Figs. 2.1, 3.1). Cupules lack tubercles and are deeply excavated (Fig. 6.4); each cupule gives rise to single radial duct approximately 0.1 mm in diameter with axis projecting proximally away from the oral surface at elevation angle of about 25° relative to aboral surface of marginal ossicle (Fig. 4). Some marginal ossicles have circumferentially oriented linear indentation on proximal side just above radial ducts (Fig. 6.3). Aboral surface relatively flat except for slight upturn along distal and proximal edges; densely covered with small pits; lateral edges in contact with adjacent marginal ossicles. In well-preserved specimens, ossicle surface displays stereom microstructure showing extended trabeculae (Fig. 5.15.6). Lateral surfaces have two prominent, centrally positioned regions of linear articulation ridges inclined at ~30°. Perpendicular to articulation ridges is range of lateral striae positioned along oral edge of ossicle. Lateral channels extend distally beginning at lower inside edge of each marginal ossicle and gradually curve upward to join circumferential channel just above cupules. Lateral channels on pairs of adjacent marginal ossicles form tube-like passageway that bifurcates, one smaller branch extending laterally to peripheral skirt and other up to circumferential ring (Figs. 5.1, 6.4).

Marginal ossicles penetrated by network of internal microscopic canals that terminate at ossicle surface as pores referred to as “upper and lower pits” by Kolata (Reference Kolata1975) and “facet canals” by Smith and Paul (Reference Smith and Paul1982). Canals approximately 0.06 mm in diameter present in proximal region of marginal ossicles. Facet canals vary in number from 6 or 7 in small marginal ossicles (Fig. 5.4) to 20 or more in larger ossicles (Fig. 6.1). Erosion of proximal face of marginal ossicle in specimen ISGS-PAL22-45 exposes internal network of canals revealing connection between upper and lower series of openings (Fig. 6.2). One specimen (Fig. 4) shows evidence that facet canal is bifurcated and possibly connected to distal regions of marginal ossicle. Facet canals permeate proximal part of marginal ossicle, extending upward internally from a depression inside radial facet to just below radial ducts where they diverge and form a single horizontal row of evenly spaced pores (Fig. 5.35.6). Number of pores within radial facets generally equal to number of corresponding pores just below radial duct. Axes of canals at upper pore openings project proximally away from the oral surface at elevation angle of about 25° relative to aboral surface of marginal ossicle, parallel to axes of radial ducts (Fig. 5.3). Pore openings visible on upper surface of marginal ossicle (Fig. 5.6). Canal openings within each radial facet arranged in two tightly packed vertical rows beneath adjacent terminal radial plate of central disk (Figs. 5.4, 6.1). Distal edge of terminal radial plate articulates with inverted-U-shaped radial facet on proximal edge of associated marginal ossicle (Fig. 5.3); terminal radial plate bears groove on lower surface (Fig. 1.2) that forms hood over tissue entering facet canals. Proximal edge of terminal radial plate onlaps distal edge of proximally adjacent radial plate (Fig. 5.3, 5.6). It appears that distalmost radial plates extend beneath the terminal cover plates into curved facets along proximal edges of aboral surfaces of the marginal ossicles (Fig. 5.3). Imbrication of radial and interradial plates continues toward center of disk.

Peripheral skirt (Fig. 1.3): Periphery of marginal ring ossicles enclosed by numerous small, imbricate ossicles that decrease in size distally. Proximal or frontal plate is largest in skirt, curved, stands erect or folded down; articulated with distal edge of cupule. In lost paratype BMNH DK-69 (Kolata, Reference Kolata1975, pl. 11, fig. 1), part of the skirt is turned up, covering the cupules.

Remarks

In the preceding species description, we provide skeletal details for C. scammaphoris but have nothing to add or change in the original species diagnosis given by Smith and Paul (Reference Smith and Paul1982).

Discussion

Facet canals and nervous system

This network of canals in cyclocystoid marginal ossicles was described and illustrated by Smith and Paul (Reference Smith and Paul1982, p. 602, pl. 11, fig. 180). The canals likely held a network of specialized tissue that originated near the center of the central disk and bifurcated distally two or three times before entering the marginal ossicles. This origin and function are made clear by the connection between the channel on each radial plate and the radial facet canal pores within each marginal ossicle. It should be noted that the terminal radial plate has a groove on its oral surface (Fig. 1.2) that would have formed a hood over the tissue entering the facet canals. The network continued upward through the facet canals, exiting the marginal ossicles just below the prominent radial ducts. The size and distribution of the facet canals are comparable to those of the nerve canals in skeletal ossicles of living crinoids and ophiuroids (Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982; Holland et al., Reference Holland, Grimmer and Wiegmann1991) and would not be unexpected in cyclocystoids. Conceivably, a nervous system in cyclocystoids would have originated from a nerve ring positioned near the center of the upper surface of the central disk. Accordingly, the nerves branched out along the channels of the radial plates, passed below the terminal radial plates into the marginal ossicles, and then continued internally upward to just below the interior opening of the radial ducts (Fig. 5.3, 5.5).

The axes of the facet canals and radial ducts project proximally away from the oral surface at an angle of approximately 25° relative to the aboral surface of each marginal ossicle. A single marginal ossicle in C. scammaphoris can have as many as 16 facet canals and two radial ducts (Fig. 6.1). For a specimen having 32 marginal ossicles, this would amount to more than 60 radial ducts and 500 facet canals all pointing proximally away from the oral surface. This arrangement suggests that the tissue occupying the radial ducts and facet canals also continued proximally away from the oral surface to form a dome-like network that would have converged within a space positioned above the radial plates (Fig. 7).

Channeled radial plates and water vascular system

In addition to the nerve tissue, the channeled radial plates likely contained the radial vessels of the water vascular system. Accordingly, the network emanated from a centrally positioned ring canal and followed the radial channels to the proximal side of the marginal ossicles. At this point, some branches of the radial canals and nervous system would be in line with, and possibly would continue into, the lateral channels of adjacent marginal ossicles.

Lateral and circumferential channels on the marginal ossicles

The lateral and circumferential channels were observed by Kolata (Reference Kolata1975, fig. 17) in Cyclocystoides scammaphoris and postulated to have contained elements of the water vascular, nervous, or hemal systems. These appear to be the same channels as the “marginal sutural pores” described by Ewin et al. (Reference Ewin, Reich, Graham and Cournoyer2019) in Perforocycloides nathalieae from the early Silurian of Anticosti Island, Quebec, Canada.

Body cavity

An upper disk was proposed by Kolata (Reference Kolata1975) on the basis of the upward projection of the radial ducts in C. scammaphoris. This interpretation was rejected by Smith and Paul (Reference Smith and Paul1982) in favor of a body plan consisting of a central disk with two layers, one of radial and interradial plates and the other of thin polygonal annular plates. In their cross section of C. tholicos Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982 (p. 582, fig. 1b), the annular plates are portrayed as very thin and in contact with the radial and interradial plates. Smith and Paul (Reference Smith and Paul1982) stated that the body cavity “was at most only a narrow space separating” the two layers (p. 592) and further that this “precludes extensive internal tissue” (p. 579). Such a reduced body cavity is unlike that in known echinoderms. Alternatively, the proximal projection of radial ducts and facet canals upward away from the radial/interradial plates in C. scammaphoris (Figs. 5, 7) suggests that an upper disk may have been present. Accordingly, the body cavity could have been encapsulated by: (1) a non- or weakly calcified upper disk, (2) the marginal ossicles, and (3) a lower disk of radial-interradial plates, including annulars if present. Additional evidence is needed to confirm or negate this hypothesis.

Life mode

Cyclocystoids commonly occur in association with an abundant and diverse marine fauna in carbonate and siliciclastic rocks that were deposited in subtidal marine environments. Seafloor substrates ranged from firm to unstable, and the environments were generally characterized by significant infaunal and epifaunal activity. The most stable orientation and likely living position of cyclocystoids would have been with the peripheral skirt, flat (aboral) surface of the marginal ossicles, and annular plates of the central disk all resting on the substrate (Fig. 7). In this position, the vaulted crests of the marginal ossicles with prominent pustules and cupules faced upward in the water column.

Conclusions

An extensive network of facet canals within the marginal ossicles is present in specimens of Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, Reference Smith and Paul1982 from the Upper Ordovician rocks of north-central Illinois, east-central Missouri, and central Tennessee. The distribution and orientation of the canals can be observed and mapped in marginal ossicles whose proximal surface is carefully excavated or eroded. The network extends from below the terminal radial plates on the upper surface of the radial plates into the facet canals in the proximal face of each marginal ossicle and then upward through the ossicle interior. The canals exit the ossicle in a linear series of pores situated just below the radial ducts. This network of facet canals is also present in Morrocodiscus smithi Reich et al. (Reference Reich, Sprinkle, Lefebvre, Rössner, Zamora and Rahman2017, fig. 7.8) and Sievertsia devonica (Sieverts-Doreck, Reference Sieverts-Doreck1951) as figured by Smith and Paul (Reference Smith and Paul1982, plate 7, fig. 117), and we predict its presence in all cyclocystoids. These observations pave the way for future work that further clarifies cyclocystoid functional morphology and life mode.

Acknowledgments

We thank P.A. Jell, R. Mooi, B. Lefebvre, and M. Reich for the many helpful comments and suggestions that improved the manuscript. We thank the Mid-America Paleontology Society (MAPS) for its decades-long commitment to bringing together professionals and amateurs so as to “make a real contribution to the collecting, study, preparation, identification, and display of fossils.” Without MAPS, two of us (T.F. and A.K.) would likely have never found their way to their co-authors, and the Missouri discovery would have gone unpublished. Likewise, T.F. and A.K. thank Missouri Fossil Hunters, a group without which the identity and significance of the Missouri specimens might never have been realized. This paper is Missouri Fossil Hunters contribution #1.

Declaration of competing interests

The authors declare none.

Appendix

Cyclocystoides scammaphoris specimens described here are from Upper Ordovician rocks in three regions of the American midcontinent. The first group of specimens includes the type specimens and newly discovered marginal ossicles from the Mifflin and Grand Detour members of the Upper Ordovician Platteville Formation in north-central Illinois (Fig. S1). The second group is a suite of recently discovered specimens from the Upper Ordovician rocks of east-central Missouri (Fig. S2). Notable cyclocystoid-bearing stratigraphic units include: (1) the upper two meters of the Zell Member, Macy Limestone Formation, Plattin Group, (2) the Castlewood Limestone Member (Deicke K-bentonite Bed at base), Spechts Ferry Formation, Decorah Group, and (3) the portion of the Glencoe Shale Member immediately below the Millbrig K-bentonite Bed, Spechts Ferry Formation, Decorah Group. The Missouri cyclocystoids occur primarily as disarticulated marginal ossicles and rarely as complete marginal rings of ossicles. Some bedding planes contain tens to hundreds of marginal ossicles per square meter, varying from well preserved to deeply weathered and lacking surface details. The third occurrence of C. scammaphoris is in the Upper Ordovician Lebanon Limestone of the Stones River Group of central Tennessee (Fig. S3). All specimens occur within the Phragmodus undatus Conodont Biozone.

Figure S1. Maps and stratigraphy: (1) USA with position of Illinois; (2) state of Illinois with location of city of Dixon in Lee County; (3) stratigraphic column based on drill core of Illinois State Geological Survey No. 1 Jerry Stuff exploratory boring, locality 7. Lithologic symbols shown on right side.

Figure S2. Maps and stratigraphy: (1) USA with position of Missouri; (2) state of Missouri with location of Jefferson County (J) where specimens of Cyclocystoides scammaphoris were collected; (3) stratigraphic column based on outcrop exposed on Fox Creek Road 1 km west of Allenton Road in Eureka, St. Louis County, Missouri, locality 7. The stratigraphic succession, thickness of beds, and cyclocystoid-bearing stratigraphic horizons are typical of those occurring in east-central Missouri. Lithologic symbols as in Figure S1.

Figure S3. Maps and stratigraphy: (1) USA with position of Tennessee; (2) state of Tennessee with location of Rutherford County; (3) stratigraphic column based on outcrop exposed on east side of I-24, 2.8 km north of Hoovers Gap exit (approximately 15 km southeast of Murfreesboro), Rutherford County, Tennessee, locality 8. Stratigraphic succession, thickness of beds, and cyclocystoid-bearing stratigraphic horizon are shown. Lithologic symbols as in Figure S1.

In this work, the stratigraphic framework follows Kolata (Reference Kolata2021) for Illinois, Thompson (Reference Thompson1991) for Missouri, and Wilson (Reference Wilson1949) for central Tennessee. The Missouri cyclocystoids occur in association with the Deicke and Millbrig K-bentonite beds, two of the most widespread and well-documented volcanic ash beds in North America (Kolata et al., Reference Kolata, Frost and Huff1986, Reference Kolata, Huff and Bergström1996). Uranium–lead dating of the Deicke K-bentonite Bed yields an age of 453.35 ± 0.10 Ma (Herrmann et al., Reference Herrmann, Haynes, Robinet, Konzett and Emerson2021). The Millbrig K-bentonite is a confirmed Ordovician Global Boundary Stratotype Section and Point (GSSP) marking the boundary between the Turinian and Chatfieldian stages of North America (Bergström et al., Reference Bergström, Chen, Gutiérrez-Marco and Dronov2009) and has been dated to 452.86 ± 0.29 Ma (Sell et al., Reference Sell, Ainsaar and Leslie2013). These stratigraphic relations support assignment of the Platteville Formation and Plattin Group to the North American Turinian Stage of the Mohawkian Series and the global Sandbian Stage of the Upper Ordovician Series. The Decorah Group strata of interest in this study lie below the Millbrig K-bentonite and are thus of Turinian age, while Decorah Group strata lying above this K-bentonite are of Chatfieldian age.

Northern Illinois localities

  1. 1. Dixon Crusher East Quarry: 4 km north of Dixon, Lee County, Illinois; 41°51′54.31″N, 89°26′29.76″W. Grand Detour Member, Platteville Formation.

  2. 2. Dixon Crusher Northwest Quarry: 4 km north of Dixon, Lee County, Illinois; 41°52′50.30″N, 89°27′10.34″W. Mifflin Member, Platteville Formation.

  3. 3. Dixon Northwest Quarry: 5 km north of Dixon, Lee County, Illinois; 41°53′32.34″N, 89°27′58.97″W. Mifflin Member, Platteville Formation.

  4. 4. Trask Bridge Road: Quarry on north side of State Route 70, 5.8 km southeast of intersection of State Routes 70 and 75 near Durand, Winnebago County, Illinois; 42°22′35.72″N, 89°17′11.05″W. Forreston Beds, Grand Detour Member, Platteville Formation.

  5. 5. Stratigraphic column based on a drill core and gamma-ray log from the Illinois State Geological Survey No. 1 Jerry Stuff exploratory boring (API 121412600200) drilled in a small quarry on the west side of Lowell Road, 9 km north of Dixon, Illinois, 41°56′30.76″N, 89°29′39.36″ W. The entire Platteville Formation is present in this drill core.

East-central Missouri localities

  1. 6. Route M near Lemay Ferry Road overpass: Outcrop on both sides of Missouri Supplemental Route M about halfway between the Interstate 55 Barnhart exit and the Missouri Route 21 exit; 38°21′43.7′′N, 90°28′16.6′′W.

  2. 7. Fox Creek Road: Outcrop previously described by Kolata et al. (Reference Kolata, Frost and Huff1986) and Thompson (Reference Thompson1991) on both sides of Fox Creek Road 1 km west of Allenton Road in Eureka, St. Louis County, Missouri; 38°30′16.3′′N, 90°41′24.8′′W.

Central Tennessee locality

  1. 8. Roadcut on I-24, 2.8 km north of Hoovers Gap exit (approximately 15 km southeast of Murfreesboro), Rutherford County, Tennessee; 35°41′38.40′′N, 86°17′51.93′′W. C. scammaphoris found in the lower member of the Lebanon Limestone of the Stones River Group.

References

Ausich, W.I., and Zehler, N.E., 2022, Recovery of Laurentian cyclocystoids following Late Ordovician extinctions (Brassfield Formation, Llandovery; southwestern Ohio): Journal of Paleontology, v. 97, p. 380385, https://doi.org/10.1017/jpa.2022.95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bather, F.A., 1900, The Edrioasteroida, in Lankester, E.R., ed., The Echinodermata. A Treatise on Zoology, part 3: London, A. and C. Black, p. 205216.Google Scholar
Begg, J.L., 1934, On the genus Cyclocystoides: Geological Magazine, v. 71, p. 220224.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Begg, J.L. 1939 On the genus Cyclocystoides with a description of a new species from the Ashgillian of Girvan: Transactions of the Geological Society of Glasgow, v. 20, p. 2128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Berg-Madsen, V., 1987, A new cyclocystoid from the Lower Ordovician of Öland, Sweden: Palaeontology, v. 30, p. 105116.Google Scholar
Bergström, S.M., Chen, X., Gutiérrez-Marco, J.C., and Dronov, A.V., 2009, The new chronostratigraphic classification of the Ordovician System and its relations to major regional series and stages and to δ13C chemostratigraphy: Lethaia, v. 42, p. 97107, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1502-3931.2008.00136.x.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ewin, T.A., Reich, M., Graham, M.R., and Cournoyer, M.E., 2019, Perforocycloides nathalieae new genus and species, an unusual Silurian cyclocystoid (Echinodermata) from Anticosti Island, Québec, Canada: PalZ (Palaontologische Zeitschrift), v. 93, p. 625635, https://doi.org/10.1007/s12542-019-00483-w.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Glass, A., Ausich, W.I., and Copper, P., 2003, New cyclocystoid (phylum Echinodermata) from Anticosti Island, Quebec, and its bearing on cyclocystoid life modes: Journal of Paleontology, v. 77, p. 949957, https://doi.org/10.1666/0022-3360(2003)077%3C0949:NCPEFA%3E2.0.CO;2.2.0.CO;2>CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hall, J., 1872, Description of new species of Crinoidea and other fossils from strata of the age of the Hudson River Group and Trenton Limestone: Report of the New York State Museum of Natural History, v. 24, p. 205224.Google Scholar
Haude, R., and Thomas, E., 1994, Eleutherozoen (Echinodermata) aus dem Unter-Karbon von Aprath im Bergischen Land, in Hackler, C., Heinrich, A., and Krause, E.-B., eds., Geologie, Paläontologie und Vor- und Frühgeschichte zwischen Lippe und Wupper: Archäologie im Ruhrgebiet, v. 2, p. 115132.Google Scholar
Herrmann, A.D., Haynes, J.T., Robinet, R.M., Konzett, J., and Emerson, N.R., 2021, Insights into the tectonostratigraphic setting of the Southern Appalachians during the Blountian tectophase from an integrated geochemical analysis of magmatic phenocrysts in the Ordovician Deicke K-bentonite: Lithos, v. 398–399, n. 106301, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2021.106301.Google Scholar
Holland, N.D., Grimmer, J.C., and Wiegmann, K., 1991, The structure of the sea lily Calamocrinus diomedae, with special reference to the articulations, skeletal microstructure, symbiotic bacteria, axial organs, and stalk tissues (Crinoida, Millericrinida): Zoomorphology, v. 110, p. 115132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kesling, R.V., 1963, Morphology and relationships of Cyclocystoides: University of Michigan Museum of Paleontology, Contributions, v. 18, no. 9, p. 157176.Google Scholar
Kesling, R.V., 1966, Cyclocystoids, in Moore, R.C., ed., Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part U, Echinodermata, Volume 3, no. 1: Lawrence, Kansas, Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press, p. U188U210.Google Scholar
Klein, J.T., 1778, Naturalis Dispositio Echinodermatum. Accessit Lucubratiuncula de Aculeis Echinorum Marinorum et Specilegium de Belemnitis. Edita et Descriptionibus Novisque Inventis et Synonymis Auctorum Auca a Nathanaele Godofredo Leske: Leipzig, Officina Gleditdchiana, xx + 278 p., 54 pl. [in Latin]Google Scholar
Kolata, D.R., 1975, Middle Ordovician echinoderms from northern Illinois and southern Wisconsin: Paleontological Society Memoir 7, 74 p.Google Scholar
Kolata, D.R., 2021, Fossils of the Upper Ordovician Platteville Formation in the upper Midwest USA: an overview: Illinois State Geological Survey Bulletin 108, 316 p.Google Scholar
Kolata, D.R., Frost, J.K., and Huff, W.D., 1986, K-bentonites of the Ordovician Decorah subgroup, upper Mississippi Valley: correlation by chemical fingerprinting: Illinois State Geological Survey Circular 537, 30 p., https://hdl.handle.net/2142/42924.Google Scholar
Kolata, D.R., Huff, W.D., and Bergström, S.M., 1996, Ordovician K-bentonites of eastern North America: Geological Society of America Special Paper 313, 84 p.Google Scholar
Miller, S.A., 1882, Descriptions of three new orders and four new families, in the class Echinodermata, and eight new species from the Silurian and Devonian formations: Journal of the Cincinnati Society of Natural History, v. 5, p. 221231.Google Scholar
Miller, S.A., and Gurley, F.E., 1895, Description of new species of Paleozoic Echinodermata: Illinois State Museum of Natural History Bulletin No. 6, 62 p., https://www.biodiversitylibrary.org/item/34966.Google Scholar
Müller, P., and Hahn, G., 2019, Multisievertsia, eine neue Gattung der Cyclocystoidea (Echinodermata) aus dem deutschen Unter-Devon: Mainzer Geowissenschaftliche Mitteilungen, v. 47, p. 5568.Google Scholar
Nichols, D., 1969, Echinoderms (fourth edition): London, Hutchinson and Sons, Ltd., 192 p.Google Scholar
Nichols, D., 1972, The water vascular system in living and fossil echinoderms: Palaeontology, v. 15, p. 519538.Google Scholar
Raymond, P.E., 1913, Notes on Cyclocystoides: Bulletin of the Victoria Museum. v. 1, p. 2332.Google Scholar
Reich, M., and Kutscher, M., 2010, Cyclocystoids (Echinodermata: Echinozoa) from the Silurian of Gotland, Sweden, in Harris, L.G., Böttger, S.A., Walker, C.W., and Lesser, M.P., eds., Echinoderms: Durham: London, Taylor and Francis Group, p. 144171.Google Scholar
Reich, M., Sprinkle, J., Lefebvre, B., Rössner, G.E., Zamora, S., and Rahman, I.A., 2017, The first Ordovician cyclocystoid (Echinodermata) from Gondwana and its morphology, paleoecology, taphonomy, and paleogeography: Journal of Paleontology, v. 91, p. 735754, https://doi.org/10.1017/jpa.2017.7.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Salter, J.W., and Billings, E., 1858, On Cyclocystoides, a new genus of Echinodermata from the lower and middle Silurian rocks: Geological Survey of Canada, Figures and Descriptions of Canadian Organic Remains, Decade, v. 3, p. 8690.Google Scholar
Sell, B., Ainsaar, L. and Leslie, S., 2013. Precise timing of the Late Ordovician (Sandbian) super-eruptions and associated environmental, biological, and climatological events: Journal of the Geological Society, v. 170, p. 711714, https://doi.org/10.1144/jgs2012-148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sieverts-Doreck, H., 1951, Über Cyclocystoides Salter & Billings und eine neue Art aus dem belgischen und rheinischen Devon: Senckenbergiana, v. 32, p. 930.Google Scholar
Smith, A.B., and Paul, C.R., 1982, Revision of the class Cyclocystoidea (Echinodermata): Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B, Biological Sciences, v. 296, p. 577679, https://doi.org/10.1098/rstb.1982.0031.Google Scholar
Smith, A.B., and Wilson, M.A., 1995, A new cyclocystoid (Echinodermata) from the Late Ordovician of Kentucky, USA: Journal of Paleontology, v. 69, p. 11861187.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sprinkle, J., Reich, M., and Lefebvre, B., 2015, Computed tomography (CT) scans of a new Ordovician cyclocystoid from Morocco and its orientation and life mode, in Zamora, S., and Rábano, I., eds., Progress in Echinoderm Palaeobiology: Cuadernos del Museo Geominero, v. 19, p. 163167.Google Scholar
Thompson, T.L., 1991, Paleozoic Succession in Missouri, Part 2, Ordovician System: Rolla, Missouri, Missouri Department of Natural Resources, Division of Geology and Land Survey, 282 p., https://archive.org/details/1991MOPaleozoicSuccessionPart2.Google Scholar
Wilson, C.W., 1949, Pre-Chattanooga stratigraphy in central Tennessee: Tennessee Division of Geology Bulletin 56, 407 p.Google Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, 1982 from Grand Detour Member of Platteville Formation, Dixon, Lee County, Illinois. (1, 3, 4) Holotype UI X4956, locality 1: (1) oral surface showing terminal cover plates and peripheral skirt with frontal plates; (3) full oral view of holotype showing peripheral skirt, terminal cover plates, and radial plates; (4) enlargement of holotype showing central opening, primary radial plates, and sutural pores. (2) Paratype UI X4957, locality 4, aboral surface showing flat, pitted surface of marginal ossicles and aboral surface of several terminal cover plates showing central groove. Scale bars = 1 mm.

Figure 1

Figure 3. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, 1982 from Castlewood Limestone Member of Spechts Ferry Formation, Jefferson County, Missouri, locality 6. (1) ISGS-PAL22-41 oral surface of complete ring of marginal ossicles showing pentaradial arrangement of paired three-cupule marginal ossicles with three cupules. (2) ISGS-PAL22-42 oral surface of incomplete ring of marginal ossicles shown with arrows, each unobscured ossicle exhibiting a cupule count of three or four. Scale bars = 1 mm.

Figure 2

Figure 4. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, 1982 from base of Castlewood Limestone Member of Spechts Ferry Formation, Jefferson County, Missouri, locality 6: lateral surface of deeply weathered marginal ossicle ISGS-PAL22-43 showing proximal of radial duct and apparent bifurcated radial facet canal. Scale bar = 1 mm.

Figure 3

Figure 5. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, 1982 from Mifflin Member of Platteville Formation, Dixon, Lee County, Illinois, locality 3. (1–6) Topotype ISGS-PAL22-44, a well-preserved marginal ossicle showing microscopic surface details: (1) lateral surface showing articulation ridges, lateral striae, circumferential channel, lateral channel, and radial facet, with an inset revealing stereom microstructure with extended trabeculae; (2) perspective view showing radial facets; (3) lateral view showing cutaway of internal cupule cavity and radial duct (light gray); red arrow shows axis of radial duct; yellow arrows show network of tissue along axis of radial channels entering facet canals positioned below the terminal radial plate and then projecting upward parallel to axis of radial ducts; network of internal facet canals shown in yellow; aboral surface of central disk consists of radial and interradial (not shown) plates underlain by thin annular plates with central pores that aligns with the sutural pores; (4) proximal side of marginal ossicle showing radial ducts and upper and lower openings of facet canals; (5) cutaway of proximal side of marginal ossicle showing path of internal facet canals in yellow; (6) oral surface of marginal ossicle showing cupules and upper openings of facet canals; upper part of figure is an artistic depiction of the terminal cover plates, channeled radial plates, interradial plates, radial channels, and sutural pores; yellow arrows mark the positions of inferred radial tissue that extended along the channels on the oral surfaces of the radial plates from the center of the disk into the facet canals beneath the terminal cover plates. Scale bar = 1 mm.

Figure 4

Figure 6. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, 1982 from Mifflin Member, Platteville Formation, Dixon, Lee County, Illinois. (1) Paratype UI X–5097, locality 1, proximal surface of a relatively large marginal ossicle showing numerous upper and lower facet canal pores. (2) Topotype ISGS-PAL22-45, locality 2, proximal surface of marginal ossicle showing exposed facet canals connecting upper and lower facet canal pores. (3) Topotype ISGS-PAL22-46, locality 2, proximal side of marginal ossicle showing radial ducts and prominent indentation. (4) Topotype ISGS-PAL22-44, locality 3, distal surface of marginal ossicle showing cupules and the circumferential channel. (5) Paratype ISGS-PAL22-48, locality 4, aboral surface showing marginal ossicles, annular plates, and circlet of primary radial plates. Scale bars = 1 mm.

Figure 5

Figure 7. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, 1982 from Platteville Formation, Dixon, Lee County, Illinois, locality 3: diagrammatic cross section through body center showing reconstruction of marginal ossicles with peripheral skirt, frontal plates, radial ducts, and circumferential and lateral channels as well as oral and aboral orientation. Central disk is composed of radial and interradial plates, annular plates, annular plate pores, and terminal radial plates. Tissue radiating from central ring (yellow) and radial duct tissue (pink) show the implied orientation of tissue projecting up from the facet canals and radial ducts.

Figure 6

Figure 2. Cyclocystoides scammaphoris Smith and Paul, 1982 from Lebanon Limestone, Rutherford County, Tennessee, locality 8. (1) Oral view of central disk in specimen PE93328 showing pentaradial arrangement of three-cupule marginal ossicles with three cupules (purple). (2) Enlargement of central disk in specimen PE93328 showing radial (blue) and interradial (yellow) plates, terminal cover plates (green), and sutural pores. Scale bar = 1 mm.

Figure 7

Figure S1. Maps and stratigraphy: (1) USA with position of Illinois; (2) state of Illinois with location of city of Dixon in Lee County; (3) stratigraphic column based on drill core of Illinois State Geological Survey No. 1 Jerry Stuff exploratory boring, locality 7. Lithologic symbols shown on right side.

Figure 8

Figure S2. Maps and stratigraphy: (1) USA with position of Missouri; (2) state of Missouri with location of Jefferson County (J) where specimens of Cyclocystoides scammaphoris were collected; (3) stratigraphic column based on outcrop exposed on Fox Creek Road 1 km west of Allenton Road in Eureka, St. Louis County, Missouri, locality 7. The stratigraphic succession, thickness of beds, and cyclocystoid-bearing stratigraphic horizons are typical of those occurring in east-central Missouri. Lithologic symbols as in Figure S1.

Figure 9

Figure S3. Maps and stratigraphy: (1) USA with position of Tennessee; (2) state of Tennessee with location of Rutherford County; (3) stratigraphic column based on outcrop exposed on east side of I-24, 2.8 km north of Hoovers Gap exit (approximately 15 km southeast of Murfreesboro), Rutherford County, Tennessee, locality 8. Stratigraphic succession, thickness of beds, and cyclocystoid-bearing stratigraphic horizon are shown. Lithologic symbols as in Figure S1.