Tentaculites oswegoensis

Tentaculites oswegoensis is a small animal of unknown origin that is often classified with molluscs or even as marine worms with a hard body. The genus Tentaculites was named in 1820 by von Schlotheim. This particular species was named by at least 1877 and is known from the Upper Ordovician rocks of the Maquoketa Group. It ranged from Oswego, IL (Kendall County) to possibly Kankakee River State Park (KRSP) in Will County, Illinois. At KRSP it appears in the basal Silurian of the Kankakee Formation but has not been found in the underlying Ordovician rocks.

Tentaculites oswegoensis
Sample of a bound grainstone with abundant invertebrate marine fossil debris from Waubonsie Creek, Oswego, Illinois
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Class: Tentaculita
Order: Tentaculitida
Family: Tentaculitidae
Genus: Tentaculites
Species:
T. oswegoensis
Binomial name
Tentaculites oswegoensis
F.B. Meek & A.H. Worthen, 1865

This particular species is approximately 0.75 to 1.25 inches in length. In Oswego, Illinois it is found mostly in clusters at Waubonsie Creek in the Basal Brainard Formation, just west of the railroad tracks. This entire class of animal became extinct at the end of the Devonian and leaves no known descendants or related species.

References

    • 1996, P.V. Rich & T.H. Rich, The Fossil Book, A Record of Prehistoric Life, p. 184-185
    • 1877, Rev. E. W. Hicks, A History Of Kendall County, Illinois, From the Earliest Discoveries to the Present Time


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