Excerpt from Carpoid Echinoderms From the Silurian and Devonian of Australia
The carpoids embrace some of the most enigmatic organisms that have lived on earth. Among the echinoderms they constitute an assemblage of archaic departures from the better known routes of evolution and before their extinction in the Middle Paleozoic demonstrated an amazing diversity of organizational plans. Their rarity as fossils has undoubtedly militated against the recognition and acceptance of their higher categorical Signifi cance in echinoderm classification. Yet when confronted by a demonstrably unique and basically new scheme of organization, even though a paucity of material is at hand, there is much to be said for pointing up the evolu tionary import of the novelty by creating the taxonomic structure seemingly required.
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