'''Halkieria''' is a genus of fossil organisms from the Lower to
Middle Cambrian. It has been found on almost every continent in Lower to Mid Cambrian deposits, forming a large component of the
small shelly fossil assemblages. The best known species is ''Halkieria evangelista'', from the North Greenland
Sirius Passet Lagerstätte in which complete specimens were collected on an expedition in 1989. The fossils were described by
Simon Conway Morris and John Peel in a short paper in 1990 in the journal ''
Nature''. Later a more thorough description was undertaken in 1995 in the journal
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London and wider evolutionary implications were posed.
Description of the fossil
The animal was bilaterally symmetric, dorso-ventrally flattened with a naked ventral side. The dorsal side was covered with imbricating
sclerites in three zones. In either end, there is a larger shellplate with prominent growthlines. The sclerites are distinguished into three types; the palmate sclerites placed
dorsally between the two shellplates, surrounding these there is a zone of sclerites termed the cultrates and along the entire margin, there is a zone of spineshaped sclerites called siculates.
The shellplates and the sclerites was originally of calcium carbonate.
Note that the smallest increments on the scale in the figure are millimeters.
Phylogenetic position of ''Halkieria
When Conway Morris and Peel described ''Halkieria evangelista'' from North Greenland, they noticed the similarity to ''
Wiwaxia'', known especially from the
Burgess shale which has sclerites organised in similar body zones. They also noticed the similarity of the shellplates to inarticulate brachiopods. This led them to suggest that ''Halkieria'' is a stem group brachiopod which had evolved into the bivalved brachiopod by gradually getting enclosed within the two valves and starting a
sessile lifemode. ''Wiwaxia'' should be the stem group of
Annelids or
Polychaetes according to Nicholas Butterfield (1990). This is supported by the recognition of its sclerites having a similar ultrastructure to that of polychaete chaetae secreted by numerous microvilli.
A number of other scientists has been stressing the molluscan affinities of ''Halkieria''. According to Vinther and Nielsen (2005), there is no character supporting either a brachiopod or an annelid affinity for Halkieria. All characters seem to be compatible with molluscs, especially the
Chitons or
Polyplacophora.
A redescription of the
Burgess shale fossil ''
Odontogriphus'' has revealed that it is a mollusc relative instead of some sort of
lophophorate. The tooth apparatus has many compelling similarities with a molluscan
radula along with a foot-like area and surrounding gill-like structures (supposed
ctenidia). The tooth apparatus is also very similar to ''
Wiwaxia'', which thus possibly marks some important links between these
Cambrian enigmas.
''Wiwaxia'' is now considered to be related to ''Halkieria'' due to the recently discovered Burgess shale organism, ''
Orthrozanclus reburrus''. ''O. reburrus'' combines features of both ''Halkieria'' (scale-mail sclerites and an anterior shell) and ''Wiwaxia'' (elongated, spine-like sclerites).
Reference
★ Vinther, J. and Nielsen, C. (2005) The Early Cambrian ''Halkieria'' is a mollusc, Zoologica Scripta, 34 (1) 81-89
External Links
★
Palaeos' article on ''Halkieria''
[1] & ''H. evangelista''
[2]
★
Pharyngula entry on ''
Orthrozanclus reburrus''