Fossilized Spicules from a Choia Sponge embedded in a shale rock on a white background
Fossilized Cambrian Choia Sponge Spicules
Fossilized Cambrian Sponge specimen embedded in a shale rock
Cambrian shale stone with fossilized  Choia sponge spicules on a stand outdoors
Fossilized side view of Cambrian shale specimen on a stand against a plain background
Large geological specimen on a stand against a neutral background
Side view of Cambrian shale rock on a black metal stand with a light background
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Fossilized Spicules from a Choia Sponge embedded in a shale rock on a white background
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Fossilized Cambrian Choia Sponge Spicules
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Fossilized Cambrian Sponge specimen embedded in a shale rock
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Cambrian shale stone with fossilized  Choia sponge spicules on a stand outdoors
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Fossilized side view of Cambrian shale specimen on a stand against a plain background
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Large geological specimen on a stand against a neutral background
  • Load image into Gallery viewer, Side view of Cambrian shale rock on a black metal stand with a light background

Fossilized Cambrian Choia Sponge Spicules

Regular price
$135.00
Sale price
$135.00
Regular price
Sold out
Unit price
per 
Shipping calculated at checkout.

Very Rare and Excellently preserved fossilized Spicules from a Choia sponge found in the Wheeler shale Utah West Desert. Utah Cambrian trilobite fossils also present.

Age: Middle Cambrian (521 to 497 mya)

Species Name: Choia carteri 

Order / Family: Protomonaxonida / Choiidae

Phylum: Porifera

Locality: Millard County, Utah

Size: Approximately 7" x 5", 1.5 lbs.

Comes with metal stand.

The preserved skeletal spicules are not connected in most fossilized Cambrian sponges that are found. They are usually separated after death of the animal and the beginning of soft tissue decay. 

Characters of the sponge important for classification include skeletal composition and shape of skeletal spicules which are a small, needle-like anatomical structures that serve various functions... part of the skeleton, providing support and deterring predators, and are made of silica or calcium carbonate.

Sponges (Poriferans) are simple aquatic animals that attach to hard surfaces and feed and live by moving water through openings in the body wall. There are many forms of sponges varying in shape, size and if they are solitary or live in colonies. They exist in all water depths.

Choiidae is an extinct family of demosponges that lived from the Cambrian to the Lower Ordovician periods. These sponges somewhat resembled a pincushion, with siliceous spicules. They are known for their disc shape, covered with radiating spines, and are famous fossils from deposits found in Utah, Morocco, Canada and China.

Choia was originally thought to rest directly on the sea floor with radiating spines from the edge of it's flat, conical body and not attached to the seabed. Recently discovered fossils from Lower Ordovician Morocco show that the living animal was actually suspended high above the seafloor, attached via stalk-like spines derived from spicules.