Homalozoans were traditionally considered to be stem-group
echinoderms, but had also been considered to lie in the stem lineage of the
chordates (
calcichordates). However, it is now generally accepted that homalozoans were echinoderms because their calcite skeleton was composed of the typical
stereom crystalline structure. They include the unusual
stylophorans (
mitrates and
cornutes), Homoiostelea (
solutes), the Homostelea (cinctans), and the Ctenocystoidea (ctenoid-bearing homalozoans). They have recently been recognised as a
polyphyletic group. The
stylophorans are now classified as a clade of the
Crinozoa, whereas the other three are classified as clades of the
Blastozoa. Solutes are the sole order of the class Homoiostelea. Solute fossils have an irregularly shaped flattened body covered in calcite plates, and are up to about 10 cm long. The body has two appendages, interpreted as a "feeding arm" at one end, bearing
tube feet at its end, and a "stele" at the other, which may have been used by the animal to propel itself along the sea floor. ==See also==