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Morrissey et al., 2006

Swimming with…Devonian fish

Morrissey, L. B., Janvier, P., Braddy, S. J., Bennett, J. P., Marriott, S. B., Tarrant, P. R.
DOI
DOI10.1111/j.1365-2451.2006.00555.x
Year2006
JournalGeology Today
Volume22
Number2
Pages66-67
Typearticle in book
LanguageEnglish
Id11992

Abstract

Armoured jawless fish, or ‘ostracoderms’, lived 450–360 million years ago, and display unusual morphologies, unlike any modern fish group. Since they left no living descendants, their mode of swimming has, until recently, remained speculative, although this is a crucial question as the first true pectoral fins evolved within the ‘ostracoderms’. The discovery of the oldest-known fish trails, from the Early Devonian (400 million year old) ‘Lower Old Red Sandstone’ of south-east Wales offers new insights into the swimming behaviour of these early fish, notably the osteostracan ‘ostracoderms’ (or cephalaspids), whose horseshoe-shaped head and paddle-shaped pectoral fins have remained a functional riddle.

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