Soomaspis


Soomaspis is a genus of small to average size marine arthropods in the Liwiidae Family, that lived during the late Ordovician. Fossil remains of Soomaspis were collected from the Soom Shale Lagerstätte in Western Cape, South Africa. Soomaspis looks like a large, soft agnostid trilobite. It has a headshield wider than the tailshield, and in between them three thoracic body segments. The genus is monotypic, its sole species being Soomaspis splendida.

Etymology

The name of the genus is a compound word of the deposit where the species was collected, and the Greek word "aspis". The species epithet, splendida comes from the Latin word "splendere".

Description

Soomaspis splendida is estimated to be over 3 cm along the axis, times longer than wide. The dorsal exoskeleton consists of a cephalon, a pygidium and two or three thoracic somites with articulating half-rings, all non-calcified, supposedly of medium convexity. The axis is poorly defined. The cephalon is transversely oval, widest at midlength. The cephalon is wider than the pygidium. Eyes are absent. Antennas are not known. The body is constricted at the three thoracic somites, so the animal gives the impression to have a waist. The pygidium is slightly wider than long, with the greatest width at midlength. The pygidium has a mid-ridge and five segments divided by clear furrows on the outer parts of the pleural field. The back edge of these furrows curve backwards, ending at a sharp angle to the pygidial margin.

Differences with other Liwiidae

Soomaspis splendida has been collected from the Soom Shale, Keurbos Farm, near Clanwilliam, Cape Province, South Africa.

Habitat

Soomaspis splendida was probably a marine bottom dweller. The Soom Shale is sometimes interfingered with the glacial tillite of the Pakhuis Formation, indicating that Soomaspis lived in the open sea, near the edge of an ice sheet.