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Strabops

Strabops is a genus of strabopid, an extinct group of arthropods. Strabops is known from a single specimen from the Late Cambrian (Furongian age) of the Potosi Dolomite, Missouri, collected by a former professor, Arthur Thacher. It is classified in the family Strabopidae of the monotypic order Strabopida, a group closely related to the aglaspidids with uncertain affinities. The generic name is composed by the Ancient Greek words στραβός, meaning "squinting", and ὄψῐς, meaning "face" (and therefore, "squinting face").

Strabops
Temporal range: Furongian, 497–485.4 Ma
S. thacheri type specimen exhibited at the Peabody Museum of Natural History, Connecticut
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Order: Strabopida
Family: Strabopidae
Genus: Strabops
Beecher, 1901
Type species
Strabops thacheri
Beecher, 1901

The history of Strabops has been turbulent and confusing since its original description by Charles Emerson Beecher, who classified it as a eurypterid. Many authors do not agree with this and have classified Strabops and its allies as part of the Aglaspidida order, while others classify them in their own order. Although the latter is the taxonomic position currently accepted, other paleontologists prefer to simply omit the strabopids from their analyzes due to the poor preservation of their fossils. In addition, it has been suggested that the closely related Paleomerus represents a synonym of Strabops, which are uniquely differentiated by the size of the telson (the posteriormost division of the body) and the position of the eyes.

Description edit

 
Restoration of S. thacheri

As the other strabopids, Strabops was a small-sized arthropod, measuring only 11 centimetres (4.3 inches) in length.[1] However, it was the largest of the strabopids, surpassing Paleomerus (9.3 cm, 3.7 in)[2] and Parapaleomerus (9.2 cm, 3.6 in).[3]

Like some other arthropod groups, the strabopids possessed segmented bodies and jointed appendages (limbs) covered in a cuticle composed of proteins and chitin. The arthropod body is divided into two tagmata (sections); the anterior prosoma (head) and posterior opisthosoma (abdomen). The appendages were attached to the prosoma, and although they are unknown in strabopids (except for one undescribed specimen of Parapaleomerus[4]), it is most likely they owned several pairs of them.[5] Although the chemical composition of the strabopid exoskeleton is unknown, it was probably mineralized (with inorganic substances),[6] sturdy and calcareous (containing calcium). The head of the strabopids was very short, the back was rounded and lacked trilobation (being divided into three lobes), the abdomen was composed by 11 segments and was followed by a thick tail-like spine, the telson.[7][4]

In the genus Strabops, the prosoma was short and broad, with a rounded outline. The eyes were located in the middle of the front of the prosoma. These were medium-sized, ovate and narrow, and pointed obliquely inwards (hence the name Strabops). Two spots between the eyes indicate the presence of the ocelli (light-sensitive simple eyes). In its abdomen, there were eleven segments, being the third the widest. The ends of the segments were rounded on the sides. In the posterior part of the segments, a row of tiny crenulations was visible. The first six segments were uniform in size, the three following ones were somewhat shorter and the last two were the longest. The telson was a broad, flat spine, and it rose slightly in the middle.[1] The appendages are unknown, although it has been suggested that they be less than seven pairs (what has been considered an overestimate).[8]

Strabops differed only from Paleomerus in the position of the eyes, which were closer together and farther from the margin than in Paleomerus,[6] and the size of the telson, being longer and narrower than in the latter.[8]

History of research edit

 
Size comparison of Strabops and both species of Paleomerus

Strabops is known by one only well preserved specimen (YPM 9001, housed at the Peabody Museum of Natural History).[9] It was found by Arthur Thacher, a former professor at the Washington University in St. Louis, in the Potosi Dolomite of the St. Francois County, Missouri. The specimen was sent to Yale University, Connecticut. The American paleontologist Charles Emerson Beecher described it as the only Cambrian eurypterid, Strabops thacheri, the generic name derived from the Ancient Greek words στραβός (strabós, squinting) and ὄψῐς (ópsis, face) and refers to the inward turning eyes. He considered Strabops different enough from the other eurypterids to erect a new genus, although he did not assign it to any family.[1] In 1912, the American paleontologists John Mason Clarke and Rudolf Ruedemann assigned Strabops to the Eurypteridae family, as well as affirming the possession of a twelfth segment and changing the position of the eyes from anterolateral (in the middle of the front) to lateral.[10]

In his book Cambrian Merostomata of 1939, the American paleontologist and geologist Gilbert Oscar Raasch considered the descriptions of the joint authorship of 1912 erroneous and agreed with Beecher on all aspects of his description, except for some reservations about the ocelli. Despite its initial classification as a eurypterid, Raasch admitted that the description of Strabops concurred with the old thought of what an aglaspidid was. It is possible that Beecher was unaware of the similarity between it and Aglaspis because of the distorted illustration of the latter by the American zoologist and paleontologist Robert Parr Whitfield. Therefore, Raasch placed Strabops under the family Aglaspididae in the order Aglaspida.[11]

In 1971, the Swedish geologist and paleontologist Jan Bergström tentatively removed Strabopidae (at that time containing Strabops and Neostrabops) and Paleomeridae (only containing Paleomerus) from the order Aglaspidida based on the fact that the head tagma was too short to accommodate the six pairs of appendages then assumed to be present in aglaspidids. Instead, he classified them in an uncertain order in the Merostomoidea class together with the emeraldellids. Ironically, Bergström speculated that the number of pairs of appendages present in the three genera could be fewer than seven, as well as including a possible antennal segment.[6] This is currently observed as an overestimate.[8] A study published by Derek Ernest Gilmor Briggs et al. in 1979 has shown that Aglaspis spinifer had between four and five pairs of appendages, but not six, weakening Bergström's argument.[12]

In 1997, Bergström and Hou Xian-guang, a Chinese paleontologist, completely removed Strabopidae (recognizing Paleomeridae as a junior synonym), as well as the family Lemoneitidae (containing Lemoneites), from the order Aglaspidida to erect a new order, Strabopida, this time suggesting a number of no more than two pairs of appendages. However, this new clade (group) remained under the similarly-named Aglaspida subclass.[7] A year later, the British paleontologists Jason Andrew Dunlop and Paul Antony Selden eliminated Strabopida from the suborder Aglaspidida and classified them as the sister taxa of the latter based on the lack of aglaspidid apomorphies (distinctive characteristics), such as the lack of genal spines (a spine placed in the posterolateral part of the prosoma).[9] Other authors have reinforced this argument by the trapezoidal telson form of Paleomerus and Strabops in contrast to the long styliform telson of the aglaspidids.[8] However, some authors prefer to represent the taxonomic position of the strabopids as uncertain due to the poor preservation of their fossils.[13]

Classification edit

 
Reconstruction of the closely related Paleomerus hamiltoni. Some authors suspect they may represent synonyms.

Strabops is classified in its own order, Strabopida,[14] in the clade Arachnomorpha,[8] along with Paleomerus, Parapaleomerus and potentially Khankaspis.[14] It was described originally as the only Cambrian eurypterid,[1] and later as an aglaspidid.[11] It would not be until 1997 when the order Strabopida was described,[7] but there is still doubt if the exclusion of them from Aglaspidida was really correct. The current status of the strabopids is of aglaspidid-like arthropods of uncertain affinities.[13]

Strabops shares with the other strabopids a series of characteristics that distinguish them all from the other arthropods. These are an abdomen divided into eleven segments followed by a thick spine, the telson. The head was short with sessile compound eyes. The back was rounded. Like Paleomerus, Strabops possessed prominent dorsal eyes, however, there is no evidence of this in the fossils of Parapaleomerus.[7][14]

The great similarity that Strabops and Paleomerus share has cast doubt on many authors about whether both genera are really synonymous or not. The Norwegian paleontologist and geologist Leif Størmer described Paleomerus as an intermediate form between Xiphosura (commonly known as horseshoe crabs) and Eurypterida, only highlighting a unique feature different from Strabops, a twelfth segment.[2] Nevertheless, a fourth specimen found in Sweden has shown that this extra segment actually represented the telson of the animal,[8] making them virtually indistinguishable.[9] Although this should convert both genera into synonyms, over time, more differences have been highlighted, such as the position of the eyes (closer to each other and farther from the margin in Strabops than in Paleomerus)[6] and the size of the telson (longer and narrower in Strabops than in Paleomerus), which keeps them as separate but closely related genera.[8]

The cladogram below published by Jason A. Dunlop and Paul A. Selden (1998) is based on the major chelicerate groups (in bold, Aglaspida, Eurypterida and Xiphosurida, Scorpiones and other arachnid clades) and their outgroup taxa (used as a reference group). Strabops and Paleomerus are shown as the sister taxa of Aglaspida.[9]

Note that there are several outdated elements. For example, Lemoneites was remitted to the Glyptocystitida order of echinoderms in 2005.[14]

Paleoecology edit

The type and only known specimen of Strabops has been found in Furongian (Upper Cambrian) deposits in eastern Missouri.[1] Strabops was at least an inhabitant of the sea, if not born in it. In addition, there are two specimens of the marine brachiopod Obolus lamborni and a poorly preserved trilobite head attached to the slab.[15]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e Beecher, C. E. (1901). "Discovery of Eurypterid remains in the Cambrian of Missouri". American Journal of Science. 12 (71): 364–366. Bibcode:1901AmJS...12..364B. doi:10.2475/ajs.s4-12.71.364.
  2. ^ a b Størmer, Leif (1956). "A Lower Cambrian merostome from Sweden" (PDF). Arkiv för Zoologi. Series 2. 9: 507–514.
  3. ^ Xian-guang, Hou; Aldridge, Richard J.; Bergström, Jan; Siveter, David J.; Siveter, Derek J.; Feng, Xiang-Hong (2004). The Cambrian Fossils of Chengjiang, China: The Flowering of Early Animal Life (1 ed.). Oxford: Blackwell. p. 233. doi:10.1002/9780470999950. ISBN 9780470999943. S2CID 88949935.
  4. ^ a b Xian-guang, Hou; Siveter, David J.; Siveter, Derek J.; Aldridge, Richard J.; Pei-Yun, Cong; Gabbott, Sarah E.; Xiao-Ya, Ma; Purnell, Mark A.; Williams, Mark (2017). The Cambrian Fossils of Chengjiang, China: The Flowering of Early Animal Life (2 ed.). John Wiley & Sons. ISBN 9781118896310.
  5. ^ Størmer, Leif (1955). "Merostomata". Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology, Part P Arthropoda 2, Chelicerata. p. 23.
  6. ^ a b c d Bergström, Jan (1971). "Paleomerus – merostome or merostomoid". Lethaia. 4 (4): 393–401. Bibcode:1971Letha...4..393B. doi:10.1111/j.1502-3931.1971.tb01862.x.
  7. ^ a b c d Hou, Xian-Guang; Bergström, Jan (1997). Arthropods of the Lower Cambrian Chengjiang fauna, southwest China. Fossils and Strata. Vol. 45. pp. 1–116. ISBN 9788200376934.
  8. ^ a b c d e f g O. Erik Tetlie, Rachel A. Moore (2004). "A new specimen of Paleomerus hamiltoni (Arthropoda; Arachnomorpha)". Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh: Earth Sciences. 94 (3): 195–198. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.717.1248. doi:10.1017/S0263593300000602. S2CID 129086749.
  9. ^ a b c d Dunlop, J. A.; Selden, Paul A. (1998). "The early history and phylogeny of the chelicerates". Arthropod Relationships. Arthropod Relationships. The Systematics Association Special Volume Series. Vol. 55. pp. 221–235. doi:10.1007/978-94-011-4904-4_17. ISBN 978-94-010-6057-8.
  10. ^ Clarke, J. K., Ruedemann R. (1912) "The Eurypterida of New York"
  11. ^ a b Raasch, Gilbert Oscar (1939). Cambrian Merostomata. Geological Society of America Special Papers. Vol. 19. Geological Society of America. pp. 1–146. doi:10.1130/SPE19. ISBN 9780813720197.
  12. ^ Briggs, Derek Ernest Gilmor; Bruton, David L.; Whittington, Harry Blackmore (1979). "Appendages of the arthropod Aglaspis spinifer (Upper Cambrian, Wisconsin) and their significance" (PDF). Palaeontology. 22: 167–180.
  13. ^ a b Ortega-Hernández, J.; Legg, D. A.; Braddy, S. J (2013). "The phylogeny of aglaspidid arthropods and the internal relationships within Artiopoda". Cladistics. 29 (1): 15–45. doi:10.1111/j.1096-0031.2012.00413.x. PMID 34814371. S2CID 85744103.
  14. ^ a b c d Rudy Lerosey-Aubril (2014). "Notchia weugi gen. et sp. nov.: A new short-headed arthropod from the Weeks Formation Konservat-Lagerstatte (Cambrian; Utah)". Geological Magazine. 152 (2): 351–357. doi:10.1017/S0016756814000375. S2CID 83671216.
  15. ^ Schuchert, Charles (1916). "The Earliest Fresh-Water Arthropods". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 2 (12): 726–733. Bibcode:1916PNAS....2..726S. doi:10.1073/pnas.2.12.726. JSTOR 83645. PMC 1091147. PMID 16586669.

strabops, this, article, about, extinct, strabopid, beetle, beetle, genus, strabopid, extinct, group, arthropods, known, from, single, specimen, from, late, cambrian, furongian, potosi, dolomite, missouri, collected, former, professor, arthur, thacher, classif. This article is about the extinct strabopid For the beetle see Strabops beetle Strabops is a genus of strabopid an extinct group of arthropods Strabops is known from a single specimen from the Late Cambrian Furongian age of the Potosi Dolomite Missouri collected by a former professor Arthur Thacher It is classified in the family Strabopidae of the monotypic order Strabopida a group closely related to the aglaspidids with uncertain affinities The generic name is composed by the Ancient Greek words strabos meaning squinting and ὄpsῐs meaning face and therefore squinting face StrabopsTemporal range Furongian 497 485 4 Ma PreꞒ Ꞓ O S D C P T J K Pg NS thacheri type specimen exhibited at the Peabody Museum of Natural History ConnecticutScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaKingdom AnimaliaPhylum ArthropodaOrder StrabopidaFamily StrabopidaeGenus StrabopsBeecher 1901Type species Strabops thacheriBeecher 1901The history of Strabops has been turbulent and confusing since its original description by Charles Emerson Beecher who classified it as a eurypterid Many authors do not agree with this and have classified Strabops and its allies as part of the Aglaspidida order while others classify them in their own order Although the latter is the taxonomic position currently accepted other paleontologists prefer to simply omit the strabopids from their analyzes due to the poor preservation of their fossils In addition it has been suggested that the closely related Paleomerus represents a synonym of Strabops which are uniquely differentiated by the size of the telson the posteriormost division of the body and the position of the eyes Contents 1 Description 2 History of research 3 Classification 4 Paleoecology 5 ReferencesDescription edit nbsp Restoration of S thacheriAs the other strabopids Strabops was a small sized arthropod measuring only 11 centimetres 4 3 inches in length 1 However it was the largest of the strabopids surpassing Paleomerus 9 3 cm 3 7 in 2 and Parapaleomerus 9 2 cm 3 6 in 3 Like some other arthropod groups the strabopids possessed segmented bodies and jointed appendages limbs covered in a cuticle composed of proteins and chitin The arthropod body is divided into two tagmata sections the anterior prosoma head and posterior opisthosoma abdomen The appendages were attached to the prosoma and although they are unknown in strabopids except for one undescribed specimen of Parapaleomerus 4 it is most likely they owned several pairs of them 5 Although the chemical composition of the strabopid exoskeleton is unknown it was probably mineralized with inorganic substances 6 sturdy and calcareous containing calcium The head of the strabopids was very short the back was rounded and lacked trilobation being divided into three lobes the abdomen was composed by 11 segments and was followed by a thick tail like spine the telson 7 4 In the genus Strabops the prosoma was short and broad with a rounded outline The eyes were located in the middle of the front of the prosoma These were medium sized ovate and narrow and pointed obliquely inwards hence the name Strabops Two spots between the eyes indicate the presence of the ocelli light sensitive simple eyes In its abdomen there were eleven segments being the third the widest The ends of the segments were rounded on the sides In the posterior part of the segments a row of tiny crenulations was visible The first six segments were uniform in size the three following ones were somewhat shorter and the last two were the longest The telson was a broad flat spine and it rose slightly in the middle 1 The appendages are unknown although it has been suggested that they be less than seven pairs what has been considered an overestimate 8 Strabops differed only from Paleomerus in the position of the eyes which were closer together and farther from the margin than in Paleomerus 6 and the size of the telson being longer and narrower than in the latter 8 History of research edit nbsp Size comparison of Strabops and both species of PaleomerusStrabops is known by one only well preserved specimen YPM 9001 housed at the Peabody Museum of Natural History 9 It was found by Arthur Thacher a former professor at the Washington University in St Louis in the Potosi Dolomite of the St Francois County Missouri The specimen was sent to Yale University Connecticut The American paleontologist Charles Emerson Beecher described it as the only Cambrian eurypterid Strabops thacheri the generic name derived from the Ancient Greek words strabos strabos squinting and ὄpsῐs opsis face and refers to the inward turning eyes He considered Strabops different enough from the other eurypterids to erect a new genus although he did not assign it to any family 1 In 1912 the American paleontologists John Mason Clarke and Rudolf Ruedemann assigned Strabops to the Eurypteridae family as well as affirming the possession of a twelfth segment and changing the position of the eyes from anterolateral in the middle of the front to lateral 10 In his book Cambrian Merostomata of 1939 the American paleontologist and geologist Gilbert Oscar Raasch considered the descriptions of the joint authorship of 1912 erroneous and agreed with Beecher on all aspects of his description except for some reservations about the ocelli Despite its initial classification as a eurypterid Raasch admitted that the description of Strabops concurred with the old thought of what an aglaspidid was It is possible that Beecher was unaware of the similarity between it and Aglaspis because of the distorted illustration of the latter by the American zoologist and paleontologist Robert Parr Whitfield Therefore Raasch placed Strabops under the family Aglaspididae in the order Aglaspida 11 In 1971 the Swedish geologist and paleontologist Jan Bergstrom tentatively removed Strabopidae at that time containing Strabops and Neostrabops and Paleomeridae only containing Paleomerus from the order Aglaspidida based on the fact that the head tagma was too short to accommodate the six pairs of appendages then assumed to be present in aglaspidids Instead he classified them in an uncertain order in the Merostomoidea class together with the emeraldellids Ironically Bergstrom speculated that the number of pairs of appendages present in the three genera could be fewer than seven as well as including a possible antennal segment 6 This is currently observed as an overestimate 8 A study published by Derek Ernest Gilmor Briggs et al in 1979 has shown that Aglaspis spinifer had between four and five pairs of appendages but not six weakening Bergstrom s argument 12 In 1997 Bergstrom and Hou Xian guang a Chinese paleontologist completely removed Strabopidae recognizing Paleomeridae as a junior synonym as well as the family Lemoneitidae containing Lemoneites from the order Aglaspidida to erect a new order Strabopida this time suggesting a number of no more than two pairs of appendages However this new clade group remained under the similarly named Aglaspida subclass 7 A year later the British paleontologists Jason Andrew Dunlop and Paul Antony Selden eliminated Strabopida from the suborder Aglaspidida and classified them as the sister taxa of the latter based on the lack of aglaspidid apomorphies distinctive characteristics such as the lack of genal spines a spine placed in the posterolateral part of the prosoma 9 Other authors have reinforced this argument by the trapezoidal telson form of Paleomerus and Strabops in contrast to the long styliform telson of the aglaspidids 8 However some authors prefer to represent the taxonomic position of the strabopids as uncertain due to the poor preservation of their fossils 13 Classification edit nbsp Reconstruction of the closely related Paleomerus hamiltoni Some authors suspect they may represent synonyms Strabops is classified in its own order Strabopida 14 in the clade Arachnomorpha 8 along with Paleomerus Parapaleomerus and potentially Khankaspis 14 It was described originally as the only Cambrian eurypterid 1 and later as an aglaspidid 11 It would not be until 1997 when the order Strabopida was described 7 but there is still doubt if the exclusion of them from Aglaspidida was really correct The current status of the strabopids is of aglaspidid like arthropods of uncertain affinities 13 Strabops shares with the other strabopids a series of characteristics that distinguish them all from the other arthropods These are an abdomen divided into eleven segments followed by a thick spine the telson The head was short with sessile compound eyes The back was rounded Like Paleomerus Strabops possessed prominent dorsal eyes however there is no evidence of this in the fossils of Parapaleomerus 7 14 The great similarity that Strabops and Paleomerus share has cast doubt on many authors about whether both genera are really synonymous or not The Norwegian paleontologist and geologist Leif Stormer described Paleomerus as an intermediate form between Xiphosura commonly known as horseshoe crabs and Eurypterida only highlighting a unique feature different from Strabops a twelfth segment 2 Nevertheless a fourth specimen found in Sweden has shown that this extra segment actually represented the telson of the animal 8 making them virtually indistinguishable 9 Although this should convert both genera into synonyms over time more differences have been highlighted such as the position of the eyes closer to each other and farther from the margin in Strabops than in Paleomerus 6 and the size of the telson longer and narrower in Strabops than in Paleomerus which keeps them as separate but closely related genera 8 The cladogram below published by Jason A Dunlop and Paul A Selden 1998 is based on the major chelicerate groups in bold Aglaspida Eurypterida and Xiphosurida Scorpiones and other arachnid clades and their outgroup taxa used as a reference group Strabops and Paleomerus are shown as the sister taxa of Aglaspida 9 AglaspidaStrabopsPaleomerusNeostrabopsTriopusDusliaPseudarthronCheloniellonLemoneitesWeinberginaBunodesKasibelinurusXiphosuridaDiploaspisChasmataspisEurypteridaScorpionesOther arachnids Note that there are several outdated elements For example Lemoneites was remitted to the Glyptocystitida order of echinoderms in 2005 14 Paleoecology editThe type and only known specimen of Strabops has been found in Furongian Upper Cambrian deposits in eastern Missouri 1 Strabops was at least an inhabitant of the sea if not born in it In addition there are two specimens of the marine brachiopod Obolus lamborni and a poorly preserved trilobite head attached to the slab 15 References edit a b c d e Beecher C E 1901 Discovery of Eurypterid remains in the Cambrian of Missouri American Journal of Science 12 71 364 366 Bibcode 1901AmJS 12 364B doi 10 2475 ajs s4 12 71 364 a b Stormer Leif 1956 A Lower Cambrian merostome from Sweden PDF Arkiv for Zoologi Series 2 9 507 514 Xian guang Hou Aldridge Richard J Bergstrom Jan Siveter David J Siveter Derek J Feng Xiang Hong 2004 The Cambrian Fossils of Chengjiang China The Flowering of Early Animal Life 1 ed Oxford Blackwell p 233 doi 10 1002 9780470999950 ISBN 9780470999943 S2CID 88949935 a b Xian guang Hou Siveter David J Siveter Derek J Aldridge Richard J Pei Yun Cong Gabbott Sarah E Xiao Ya Ma Purnell Mark A Williams Mark 2017 The Cambrian Fossils of Chengjiang China The Flowering of Early Animal Life 2 ed John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781118896310 Stormer Leif 1955 Merostomata Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology Part P Arthropoda 2 Chelicerata p 23 a b c d Bergstrom Jan 1971 Paleomerus merostome or merostomoid Lethaia 4 4 393 401 Bibcode 1971Letha 4 393B doi 10 1111 j 1502 3931 1971 tb01862 x a b c d Hou Xian Guang Bergstrom Jan 1997 Arthropods of the Lower Cambrian Chengjiang fauna southwest China Fossils and Strata Vol 45 pp 1 116 ISBN 9788200376934 a b c d e f g O Erik Tetlie Rachel A Moore 2004 A new specimen of Paleomerus hamiltoni Arthropoda Arachnomorpha Transactions of the Royal Society of Edinburgh Earth Sciences 94 3 195 198 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 717 1248 doi 10 1017 S0263593300000602 S2CID 129086749 a b c d Dunlop J A Selden Paul A 1998 The early history and phylogeny of the chelicerates Arthropod Relationships Arthropod Relationships The Systematics Association Special Volume Series Vol 55 pp 221 235 doi 10 1007 978 94 011 4904 4 17 ISBN 978 94 010 6057 8 Clarke J K Ruedemann R 1912 The Eurypterida of New York a b Raasch Gilbert Oscar 1939 Cambrian Merostomata Geological Society of America Special Papers Vol 19 Geological Society of America pp 1 146 doi 10 1130 SPE19 ISBN 9780813720197 Briggs Derek Ernest Gilmor Bruton David L Whittington Harry Blackmore 1979 Appendages of the arthropod Aglaspis spinifer Upper Cambrian Wisconsin and their significance PDF Palaeontology 22 167 180 a b Ortega Hernandez J Legg D A Braddy S J 2013 The phylogeny of aglaspidid arthropods and the internal relationships within Artiopoda Cladistics 29 1 15 45 doi 10 1111 j 1096 0031 2012 00413 x PMID 34814371 S2CID 85744103 a b c d Rudy Lerosey Aubril 2014 Notchia weugi gen et sp nov A new short headed arthropod from the Weeks Formation Konservat Lagerstatte Cambrian Utah Geological Magazine 152 2 351 357 doi 10 1017 S0016756814000375 S2CID 83671216 Schuchert Charles 1916 The Earliest Fresh Water Arthropods Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2 12 726 733 Bibcode 1916PNAS 2 726S doi 10 1073 pnas 2 12 726 JSTOR 83645 PMC 1091147 PMID 16586669 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Strabops amp oldid 1214968415, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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