-
Albumares brunsae is a tri-radially
symmetrical fossil animal that
lived in the late
Ediacaran seafloor. It is a
member of the
extinct group Trilobozoa...
- organs.
Albumares brunsae represents a form
first described from the
White Sea of
Russia by
Mikhail A.
Fedonkin in 1976. In life,
Albumares most likely...
-
centre of the organism. It
seems to be
closely related to
Anfesta and
Albumares, as they have
similar morphologies including bifurcating ridges and long...
-
remains unknown.[citation needed] With the
discovery of the
closely related Albumares and Anfesta,
along with the
discoveries of much better-preserved Russian...
- tentacles)
appear and make
Anfesta look
similar in
anatomy to
Albumares and
Skinnera (Mostly
Albumares). The
diameter of
Anfesta is
thought to 18 cm (7.1 in)...
-
Inaria Temporal range:
Ediacaran Inaria karli with
Albumares Scientific classification Domain:
Eukaryota Kingdom:
Animalia Phylum: Cnidaria (?) Genus:...
- of the
gastrovascular system of I.
cocozzi resembled the one
found in
Albumares,
described by
Fedonkin (1976) from the
Valdai horizon on the
Onega Peninsula...
- million-year-old
extinct Ediacara fauna." At
least three genera of Ediacarans—
Albumares, Anfesta, and Rugoconites—share
similarities with Dendrogramma; all three...
-
cases of
preservation are
known also for
organisms related to the Anfesta-
Albumares-like
fossils from the
Doushantuo Formation, for
Beltanelloides sorichevae...
- Eoporpita, Yorgia, Andiva, Archaeaspinus, Vendia, ****insonia, Anfesta,
Albumares, Tribrachidium, Kimberella, Parvancorina,
Charniodiscus and others. List...