Biology:Bradgatia

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Short description: Genus of rangeomorphs


Bradgatia
Temporal range: 575–565 Ma
Ediacaran
Bradgatia.svg
A reconstruction of Bradgatia
Scientific classification
Kingdom:
Animalia
Phylum:
Class:
†Rangeomorpha
Genus:
Bradgatia

Boynton & Ford, 1995
Species:
B. linfordensis
Binomial name
Bradgatia linfordensis
Boynton & Ford, 1995
Bradgatia (lower left) in an assemblage with Auroralumina (top left) and Charnia (right) at Charnwood Forest

Bradgatia linfordensis is a bush-like Ediacaran fossil. It consists of six or more fronds radiating from a central anchor point at the base. It superficially resembles a compressed cabbage in appearance, although in reality it had a more intricate, fractal mode of organisation. When multiple fossils are found together they are regularly spaced out rather than randomly distributed. It dominates the ecosystem at 8 to 22 cm above the mud surface at the bottom the sea where it grew. It was over-towered by Charnia and Charniodiscus which grew nearby.

Bradgatia has been found in Charnwood Forest in England , at Mistaken Point and Bonavista Peninsula in Newfoundland and also in British Columbia. These fossils are dated from 565 to 575 mya. It was described by Helen Boynton & Ford in 1995 who published in Ediacaran fossils from the Precambrian (Charnian Supergroup) of Charnwood Forest, Leicestershire, England. Mercian Geol 13 (4) March: 178 [Zoological Record Volume 132]. It was named after Bradgate Park.

See also

References

Wikidata ☰ Q3643514 entry