Mosura

Mosura fentoni was a small radiodont living during the mid-Cambrian, about 508 million years ago, in near-equatorial shallow marine waters covering what is now western Canada.

Sixty specimens have been discovered in the Burgess Shale fossil deposits, ranging from 1.5cm long juveniles (~0.6″) to 6cm long adults (~2.4″), giving us a detailed look at Mosura’s anatomy and life history. It had three eyes – two on the sides of its head on short stalks and one in the middle of its face – and a pair of grasping frontal appendages each with six long sickle-shaped spines.

Unusually for a radiodont its body was divided into distinct regions: a four-segment neck, a six-segment mesotrunk with large swimming flaps, and an abdomen-like posterotrunk with up to at least sixteen segments (fewer in juveniles), all bearing gills along their undersides.

Its vaguely moth-like shape led to it being nicknamed “sea-moth” by field collectors, and inspired its genus name – “Mosura” is the Japanese name of the fictional giant kaiju moth-monster Mothra.

With a very high proportion of respiratory surface area for its size, Mosura was probably an active and agile fast-swimming predator, possibly living in low-oxygen waters around the outer continental shelf. Its wide oval central eye may have helped it stay orientated during rapid maneuvers, keeping track of the horizon line similar to the median eyes of modern dragonflies.

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Shishania

Shishania aculeata lived during the mid-Cambrian, around 512 million years ago, in shallow tropical waters covering what is now southwestern China.

Up to about 6cm in length (~2.4″), its spine-covered body was initially thought to be an early mollusc, but the discovery of more specimens has resulted in a new interpretation: instead of a slug-like creature, the fossils of Shishania might instead represent a flattened and ruptured chancelloriid.

Chancelloriids were an enigmatic group of Cambrian animals that had hollow bag-like bodies armored with numerous sharp star-shaped spines. They were historically classified as sponges due to their similar body plan and immobile filter-feeding lifestyle, and they’ve also been proposed to be relatives of halkieriid molluscs due to similarities in the microscopic structure of their spines – but currently it seems most likely that chancelloriids were actually their own separate lineage of early animals, closer related to eumetazoans than to sponges.

Shishania had much simpler spines than other chancelloriids, so it may represent an early stage of the evolution of these animals’ armor, showing that these structures were developed from scratch rather than adapted from a pre-existing ancestral feature.

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Thrinacodus gracia

Thrinacodus gracia* was a stemelasmobranch – a cartilaginous fish related to modern sharks and rays – living in what is now Montana, USA during the mid-Carboniferous around 324 million years ago.

* previously known as Thrinacoselache gracia

Although the cartilaginous skeletons of chondrichthyans rarely preserve, the exceptional preservation conditions of the Bear Gulch Limestone fossil deposits mean we do actually have full-body soft tissue impressions of this species. It was about 1m long (3’3″) with an unusually slender eel-like body, a pointed snout, no dorsal fins, and an elongated tapering tail.

Preserved gut contents show that Thrinacodus gracia preyed on shrimp-like crustaceans and smaller cartilaginous fish such as Falcatus and Harpagofututor. It would have inhabited a shallow tropical bay environment, and may have had a similar sort of lifestyle to the modern eels it resembled, hiding in crevices or burrowing into sediment and ambushing passing prey.

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