About: Pikaia   Sponge Permalink

An Entity of Type : owl:Thing, within Data Space : 134.155.108.49:8890 associated with source dataset(s)

In truth, pikaia was one of several animals in an aquarium that a family of space travelers brought with them on their vacation to Earth. Despite the father's misgivings, he allowed his daughter to empty the aquarium into the oceans, thereby spurring an explosion of life.

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rdfs:label
  • Pikaia
  • Pikaia
rdfs:comment
  • In truth, pikaia was one of several animals in an aquarium that a family of space travelers brought with them on their vacation to Earth. Despite the father's misgivings, he allowed his daughter to empty the aquarium into the oceans, thereby spurring an explosion of life.
  • Pikaia is an extinct animal known from the Middle Cambrian fossil found near Mount Pika in the Burgess Shale of British Columbia. It was discovered by Charles Walcott and was first described by him in 1911. Based on the obvious and regular segmentation of the body, Walcott classified it as a polychaete worm. It resembles a living chordate commonly known as the lancelet and perhaps swam much like an eel.
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  • Pikaia
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  • Subphylum
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  • Genus
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  • * P. gracilens
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dbkwik:fossil/prop...iPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:turtledove/...iPageUsesTemplate
Name
  • Pikaia
fossil range
abstract
  • In truth, pikaia was one of several animals in an aquarium that a family of space travelers brought with them on their vacation to Earth. Despite the father's misgivings, he allowed his daughter to empty the aquarium into the oceans, thereby spurring an explosion of life.
  • Pikaia is an extinct animal known from the Middle Cambrian fossil found near Mount Pika in the Burgess Shale of British Columbia. It was discovered by Charles Walcott and was first described by him in 1911. Based on the obvious and regular segmentation of the body, Walcott classified it as a polychaete worm. It resembles a living chordate commonly known as the lancelet and perhaps swam much like an eel. During his re-examination of the Burgess Shale fauna in 1979, paleontologist Simon Conway Morris placed P. gracilens in the chordates, making it perhaps the oldest known ancestor of modern vertebrates, because it seemed to have a very primitive, proto-notochord. Further, the status of Pikaia as a chordate is not universally accepted; its preservational mode suggests that it had cuticle, which is uncharacteristic of the vertebrates; further, its tentacles are unknown from other vertebrate lineages. The presence of earlier vertebrates in the Chengjiang, including Haikouicthys and Myllokunmingia, appears to show that cuticle is not necessary for preservation, overruling the taphonomic argument, but the presence of tentacles is still intriguing, and the organism cannot be conclusively assigned even to the vertebrate stem group. Averaging about 1½ inches (5 cm) in length, Pikaia swam above the sea floor using its body and an expanded tail fin. Pikaia may have filtered particles from the water as it swam along. Its "tentacles" may be comparable to those in the present-day hagfish, a jawless chordate. Only 60 specimens have been found to date.
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