ECHINODERMS 2: SEA URCHINS

Echinoid Plate Echinoid Spine

Echinoid Plate (left) Echinoid Spine (right)

Phylum Echinodermata, Class Echinoidea, Archaeocidaris

Sea urchins and sand dollars are called echinoids. They look like a pincushion. The type here in the Kaibab had very thick, bumpy spines. Shown on the right is a partially concealed spine. The swollen base of the spine is to the right where there is a hole. The left photo shows a single plate of the urchin’s body with concentric circles called the axial boss—this is where the spine attached. Dozens of such plates make up the urchin’s pincushion-shaped body—like crinoids, they fall apart after death.

Sea urchins are related to starfish and crinoids. Most such animals display a five-rayed or pentamerous symmetry in some parts of their bodies, and most are spiny. “Echino-“ means spine.

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Fossils Cover
1-Introduction 2-What are fossils? 3-Fossil Classification 4-Sponges
5-Corals 6-Intro to Bryozoans 7-Bryozoans I 8-Bryozoans II
9-Bryozoans III 10-Intro to Brachiopods 11-Brachiopods I
12-Brachiopods II 13-Brachiopods III 14-Brachiopods IV
15-Clams 16-Snails 17-Crinoids 18-Echinoids

Images, art and text copyright © Dave Thayer, 2010
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