Knightoconus | |
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artistic reconstruction of Knightoconus antarcticus | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Mollusca |
Class: | Monoplacophora |
Order: | †Archinacelloidea |
Genus: | †Knightoconus Yochelson et al., 1973[1] |
Species: | †K. antarcticus
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Binomial name | |
†Knightoconus antarcticus Yochelson et al., 1973[1]
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Knightoconus antarcticus is an extinct species of fossil monoplacophoran from the Cambrian Minaret Formation of Antarctica.[1] It is thought to represent an ancestor to the cephalopods. It had a chambered conical shell, but lacked a siphuncle.[2]
The absence of a siphuncle in K. antarcticus has been taken as evidence against cephalopod ancestry, as factors that would allow a siphuncle to penetrate preexisting septal chambers remain unknown. The prevailing argument suggests that a strand of tissue remained attached to the previous septum as the mollusc moved forwards and deposited its next septum, stopping that new septum from closing completely and becoming mineralised itself.[3]
Ten or more septa are found in mature individuals, occupying around a third of the shell – septa form very early and have been found in specimens as small as 2 mm in length.[4] Unlike monoplacophoran fossils, there is no evidence of muscle scarring in Knightoconus fossils.[4] Scars from the closely related Hypseloconus have been used to determine its orientation.[5] Knightoconus started life with an exogastric shell, that becomes endogastric as the organism grew.[6]
An alternate taxonomy is: Tergomya: Kiringellida: Hypseloconidae.[7]