Isoxyids are members of the order Isoxyida and the family Isoxyidae, a group of basal arthropods that existed during the Cambrian period. Its best known members are Isoxys, with 20 species found worldwide, and Surusicaris, known from a single species found in the Burgess Shale of Canada. Isoxyida is also sometimes taken to include the family Sunellidae, which comprises four genera: Sunella, Combinivalvula, Jinningella and Caudicaella, all of which are known from deposits in China, with Caudicaella also known from the Heatherdale Shale of South Australia. Isoxys and Surusicaris are distinguished by their bivalved carapaces and pair of upward curving grasping frontal appendages. Sunellids also had bivalved carapaces, but unlike other isoxyids these were distinguished by the presence of an anterodorsal sulcus on their carapaces. These arthropods are thought to have been predators, hunting soft-bodied prey in either the water column, or close to the seabed.