Emmonsaspis

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Emmonsaspis is a Cambrian chordate, and its fossils were found in the Cambrian-age Parker Slate of Vermont in the late 19th century.

Description

Emmonsaspis is a chordate related to Metaspriggina and Nuucichthys. It grew to roughly Template:Cvt in length and probably fed on plankton in the water column. No trace of a spinal cord is present, although roughly 50 myomeres can be seen in the fossils. It had large eyes and a large organ behind its branchial chamber, probably a liver.

There are two species: Emmonaspis worthanella and Emmonaspis cambriensis (Walcott(?) 1886(?) 1911(?)).

E. cambrensis has been described as a graptolite, a chordate, an arthropod and as a frond-like organism.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref><ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Affinities

It was interpreted by paleontologist C. D. Walcott in 1911 as a polychaete worm. Although some paleontologists regarded it as an early chordate allied with Pikaia et al., Conway Morris suggested in 1993 that it might be a Cambrian descendant of the Vendian form Pteridinium, and a frondose morphology was accepted,<ref name="Shu1996">Template:Cite journal</ref> until a 2024 study found Emmonsaspis to be in a polytomy with Metaspriggina and Nuucichthys as a stem-group vertebrate.<ref name="Lerosey-Aubril2024"/>

Notes

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