Sponges and Bryozoa are animals of slightly higher organization. They are many-celled instead of one-celled and the cells have special work to perform, which is a most important step in the direction of the specialization which characterizes the structural and life pattern of later arrivals. The Bryozoa lived in moss-like colonies which have been important rock-makers; the fossil forms bear some resemblance to corals. Sponges are too well known to require description although the familiar article of commerce is merely the framework of once-living animals. They represent the earliest organization of true animal bodies even though in appearance they may have a resemblance to plants.
Actual plants of this era were of the algae class, aquatic in habit as were their animal neighbors, the first to leave a record in the form of fossils. This record, obscure and distorted, has long been a source of perplexity to investigators. Without well-defined floras and faunas to guide them, and with rocks frequently in chaotic relationships, early geologists were content to regard it all as a “Pre-Cambrian complex.” Recent studies have contributed a great deal of information not available some years ago. It is quite possible that more advanced types of life were in abundance before the close of the second era, but material on which to base sound opinion is still scarce.
Rocks of Pre-Cambrian age are plentiful in the foothills region west of Denver. The schists, gneisses, and quartzites exposed for some miles immediately beyond the red-beds are part of this great complex. The Idaho Springs formation is known to be one of the oldest in this district, although its exact age has not been determined. Other formations are recognized among the metamorphic rocks of the region but none has contributed to our knowledge of early life.
CAMBRIAN LIFE
There can be no mistake as to the prolific development of life in Cambrian seas, for fossils of this age are to be found in many parts of the world, where ancient sea bottoms now form part of the land surface. Invertebrate animals appear to have made much progress, but plants were either scarce or too small and delicate to be productive of fossils. It is probable, however, that seaweeds and other algae were flourishing along with the invertebrates, because animal life is directly or indirectly dependent on the existence of plants. The latter sustain themselves by taking carbon and nitrogen from air, water, and soil, but animals must obtain their requirements by eating plants or eating each other. They cannot obtain what they need from the inorganic world without this help from the vegetable kingdom.
One group of animals stands out prominently above all its contemporaries. Known as the trilobites they were by far the most distinguished and most characteristic of Cambrian invertebrates. Trilobites inhabited the warmer seas of this period and several later ones, but were extinct by the end of the Paleozoic era. Hundreds of species have been described, most of them under four inches in length. Well-known distant relatives now living are the shrimps, and other crustaceans. The name Trilobite has reference to the three lobes which are apparent in the form of the upper surface, the central lobe forming a broad ridge extending along the back. Beneath the outer lobes on each side there was, during life, a row of short, jointed legs used for swimming and walking, but these delicate appendages are seldom preserved in the fossils.
Second in importance among the animals of the period were the brachiopods or lamp-shells, not true mollusks although they were provided with similar shells composed of calcium phosphate or calcium carbonate. Shells are of two parts (bivalved) as in the case of clams, but the valves are above and beneath the body instead of on the right and left sides, which is the arrangement among mollusks. Although abundant as individuals, there were only a few species during the earlier part of the period; the number of species increased, however, and the race became very persistent. About seven thousand species have been described, and the race is not yet extinct although the number of living species is relatively small.
Cambrian life evidently included representatives of all the great divisions of invertebrates; sponges, jelly-fishes, worms, and primitive corals have been reported. At the end of the period there was an elaborate molluscan fauna. The closing of the period in North America was apparently a gentle elevation of continental areas and a consequent withdrawal of the sea.
Invertebrate Fossils