• Solitary Rugose Coral

    Solitary-Rugose-Coral2

    Solitary-Rugose-Coral2

    Modern corals are colonial; meaning each structure is actually made up of the shells of masses of tiny animals. Some members of the group Rugosa were instead solitary, growing orders of magnitude larger than any single living coral. Corals are cnidarians, a group that also includes jellyfish.
    The tip of the ‘horn’ was shallowly buried in ocean floor sediments. This would lead to corals falling over on occasion due to strong currents; the animal would then build its shell towards the ‘new up’, which is why some rugose coral fossils are bent rather than straight shelled.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rugosa

  • Rugose Coral

    Rugose-Coral

    Rugose-Coral

    Modern corals are colonial; meaning each structure is actually made up of the shells of masses of tiny animals. Some members of the group Rugosa were instead solitary, growing orders of magnitude larger than any single living coral. Corals are cnidarians, a group that also includes jellyfish.
    The tip of the ‘horn’ was shallowly buried in ocean floor sediments. This would lead to corals falling over on occasion due to strong currents; the animal would then build its shell towards the ‘new up’, which is why some rugose coral fossils are bent rather than straight shelled.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rugosa

  • Solitary Rugose Coral

    Solitary-Rugose-Coral

    Solitary-Rugose-Coral

    Modern corals are colonial; meaning each structure is actually made up of the shells of masses of tiny animals. Some members of the group Rugosa were instead solitary, growing orders of magnitude larger than any single living coral. Corals are cnidarians, a group that also includes jellyfish.
    The tip of the ‘horn’ was shallowly buried in ocean floor sediments. This would lead to corals falling over on occasion due to strong currents; the animal would then build its shell towards the ‘new up’, which is why some rugose coral fossils are bent rather than straight shelled.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rugosa

  • Themnopora (“feather duster coral)”

    Themnopora

    Themnopora

    This is Thamnopora from Silurian limestone. Thamnopora is a branching tabulate coral. The name tabulate refers to the tabulae, horizontal
    elements visible in longitudinal section. All tabulate corals are colonial.

    http://home.gli.cas.cz/hladil/www/015.pdf

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tabulate_coral