69直播

Earth Sciences professor names fossil for Wooster

Mark Wilson, the Lewis M. and Marian Senter Nixon Professor of Natural Sciences

Mark Wilson, the Lewis M. and Marian Senter Nixon Professor of Natural Sciences in the Department of Earth Sciences at 69直播, and his colleague Bill Ausich, a professor at The Ohio State University, recently named a fossil after the College. The holotype, or defining example of the newly-named Cactocrinuswoosterensis, is a 350-million-year-old crinoid fossil that was first found decades ago by Wooster faculty and students in the abandoned Wooster Medal Brick and Tile Quarry. They donated it to the Cleveland Museum of Natural History, where Wilson and Ausich discovered it in the collections.

Cactocrinuswoosterensis is an echinoderm, a marine group which also contains sea stars, sea urchins, and sea cucumbers. 鈥淐rinoids are commonly called 鈥榮ea lilies鈥 because they have long stems rooted in the sea bottom with a flower-like crown of numerous arms surrounding the main body at the other end,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淭hey feed by filtering nutrients from the seawater with these arms. Crinoids are common in some parts of the fossil record and are still alive today.鈥

The holotype, or defining example of the newly-named Cactocrinus woosterensis is a 350-million-year-old crinoid fossil that was first found decades ago by Wooster faculty and students in the abandoned Wooster Medal Brick and Tile Quarry.

Cactocrinus听woosterensis

Wilson and Ausich recently published a 听about the fossil and their decision to name it after Wooster. 鈥淭he species name recognizes 69直播 in Wooster, Ohio, for its decades of support of paleontological research,鈥 they wrote. 鈥淭he holotype of听Cactocrinuswoosterensis and many other specimens in this fauna were collected by professors and students from the Department of Geology at 69直播.鈥 The names of those who originally discovered it were not recorded.

Cactocrinuswoosterensis is a new species of crinoid, which means it was not previously described in scientific literature. 鈥淚t gives us more information about the evolution and ecology of this fascinating group,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淭he specimen is also preserved unusually well for a crinoid in a shale deposit, where they are usually highly fragmented.鈥

Wilson said that finding this significant specimen in the museum鈥檚 collections that was originally discovered by Wooster faculty and students demonstrates two things: 鈥淥ne, the importance of fieldwork for discovering and documenting new scientific information, and two, the critical role museums play in preserving specimens for scientific study.鈥

Posted in News on May 11, 2023.


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