Marywadea

Extinct genus of proarticulatan fossil


title: "Marywadea" type: doc version: 1 created: 2026-02-28 author: "Wikipedia contributors" status: active scope: public tags: ["sprigginidae", "ediacaran-life", "monotypic-proarticulatan-genera", "prehistoric-invertebrates-of-australia"] description: "Extinct genus of proarticulatan fossil" topic_path: "geography/australia" source: "https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marywadea" license: "CC BY-SA 4.0" wikipedia_page_id: 0 wikipedia_revision_id: 0

::summary Extinct genus of proarticulatan fossil ::

| fossil_range = late Ediacaran ~ | image = | image_caption = Fossil of M. ovata. | genus = Marywadea | parent_authority = Glaessner, 1976 | species = ovata | authority = Glaessner & Wade, 1966 | synonyms =

  • Spriggina ovata Glaessner & Wade, 1966

Marywadea is an extinct proarticulate organism from the late Ediacaran of Australia. Originally described under Spriggina, it is a monotypic genus, containing only Marywadea ovata.

Discovery and naming

The holotype fossil of Marywadea was found from the Ediacara Member of the Rawnsley Quartzite, in Nilpena Ediacara National Park, Flinders Ranges of South Australia in 1966, and was originally tentatively assigned under the genus Spriggina. In 1976, it would be redescribed and assigned under the new genus of Marywadea.

The generic name Marywadea is in honour of Dr. Mary Wade, who had originally noted that M. ovata may in fact be distinct from Spriggina even during the original 1966 description.

Description

Marywadea ovata is an elongate organism, getting up to 31 mm in length, and 15 mm at its widest. Like most proarticulates, its bears the standard glided symmetry, meaning one side is slightly offset from the other side. Its has a high number of isomers, ranging between 40 to 50 all together. Along these isomers there are also visible tubular structures along the alternating mid-line, which have been interpreted as gonads, similar to what is seen in Yorgia.

At what is considered the front, there is a notable half-moon shaped "head" region, which is usually thinner than the widest point, which also contains branching features that have been compared to the digestive caecae, similar to what is seen in arthropods.

Affinities

When originally described under the genus Spriggina in 1966, Marywadea was considered to be that of a Polychaete, which was the prevailing consensus at the time for other proarticulates, like Dickinsonia. When the original material, alongside new material, was redescribed some ten years later in 1976, Marywadea was made its own genus, but due to its similarities with Spriggina, it remained under the Sprigginidae family. At this point, a more Arthropoda interpretation for both Spriggina, and as such Marywadea, was becoming more favoured, although many still considered a Annelida affinity for both. But come 1979, a study made recounting all known annelids from the middle Cambrian at the time looked into the affinities of Marywadea, and other then known proarticulates, a noted that both interpretations to be highly unlikely.

In 2019, Marywadae was assigned to the class Cephalozoa, primarily due to its crescent shaped "head" region and small size.

References

References

  1. (1966). "The Late Precambrian Fossils from Ediacara, South Australia". Palaeontology.
  2. Glaessner, Martin F.. (1976). "A new genus of late Precambrian polychaete worms from South Australia". Transactions of the Royal Society of South Australia.
  3. (January 1999). "An asymmetric segmented organism from the Vendian of Russia and the status of the dipleurozoa". Historical Biology.
  4. (27 April 2008). "The Ediacaran emergence of bilaterians: congruence between the genetic and the geological fossil records". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences.
  5. (23 March 1979). "Middle Cambrian polychaetes from the Burgess Shale of British Columbia". Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences.
  6. (September 2019). "Cephalonega, A New Generic Name, and the System of Vendian Proarticulata". Paleontological Journal.

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sprigginidaeediacaran-lifemonotypic-proarticulatan-generaprehistoric-invertebrates-of-australia