The Paleontology of North America

Other Echinoderms from North America

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Pentremites obesus
Pentremites obesus
© 1998 Dr. Richard Paselk, Humboldt State University Natural History Museum

Pentremites godoni major
Pentremites godoni major
© 1998 Dr. Richard Paselk, Humboldt State University Natural History Museum

Achistrum sp.
Achistrum sp.
© 1998 Dr. Richard Paselk, Humboldt State University Natural History Museum

What are Other Echinoderms? This group includes some living forms (holothurians) and some extinct forms that are very distinct from the Seastars, Echinoids, and Crinoids. Holothurians, or sea cucumbers, lack the typical calcium carbonate skeleton of most echinoids; their skeletal elements have been reduced to microscopic plates called spicules. The extinct forms, such as edrioasteroids, cystoids, blastoids, and helicoplacoids, appear to have been early evolutionary “experiments” on the basic echinoderm body plan. First and last occurrences of members of this group vary. For example, edrioastroids first appeared in the Cambrian and went extinct in the Carboniferous; holothurians first appeared in the Silurian and are still present today.

First known fossil occurrence: Cambrian.

Last known fossil occurrence: Quaternary. This group has living relatives.

Fossils through time:
Choose a time period to see what life was like:

Quaternary
Tertiary
Cretaceous
Jurassic
Triassic
Permian
Carboniferous
Devonian
Silurian
Ordovician
Cambrian
Precambrian