In Early Ordovician (Floian) strata of the
San Juan Formation, Argentina, the oldest
microfossils, known as calcisphers or
calcitarchs, are present. Early forms reached 80 to 250
μm in diameter. Some of these organisms are probably
algae. Calcitarchs lived in the
subtidal zone, from coastal waves to shoals and
reefs. Algae of the genus
Amsassia appeared. They already lived off the southern coast of
Laurentia and
Cuyania in the Early Ordovician, and later occupied an even wider range and disappeared only during the
Ordovician-Silurian extinction. In Tremadocian,
Amsassia inhabited small reefal mounds in shallow sea waters. Discovered in the Floian strata of
Newfoundland, coral-like
fossils of
Reptamsassia divergens and
Reptamsassia minuta allows to judge the level of development of reef ecosystems of the Early Ordovician, since they are the oldest example of
symbiotic intergrowth of modular species.
Echinoderm diversity increased in the Early Ordovician: new classes appeared, including
asteroids,
ophiuroids,
crinoids and
diploporitans. Various Early Ordovician echinoderms are found in the
Fillmore Formation in
Utah, USA,
Fezouata Formation in
Anti-Atlas, Morocco, and
Saint-Chinian Formation in
Montagne Noire, France. '', a large filter feeder of the Early Ordovician
Nektaspida have become less diverse after Cambrian. They most likely inhabited restricted or colder
brackish seas in the Ordovician. In the same Fezouata Formation,
Aegirocassis was discovered. This
filter feeder arthropod reached over 2 m in length and was the
largest animal of its time.
Marrellomorphs, appeared in Cambrian, continued to exist in Early Ordovician. '' Soft-bodied and shelly organisms, including Cambrian
relics as well as the new taxa of the Ordovician origin, constitute a fossil
Liexi fauna, preserved in the Lower Ordovician
Madaoyu Formation of
Hunan,
South China. Fossil specimens include
bryozoans,
sponges, echinoderms,
polychaetes,
graptolites,
trilobites and
conodonts.
Palaeoscolecidan worms, including
Liexiscolex and a possible
Ottoia specimen, are of great interest. In the deep-water sediments of the Early Ordovician (Floian)
Al Rose Formation in the
Inyo Mountains,
California, the trilobite fauna have been discovered. Despite the low species diversity, this fauna is unique due to differences in the composition of families from more eastern complexes of the comparable age. Fossils identified as belonging to the
Globampyx,
Protopresbynileus,
Carolinites,
Cloacaspis,
Geragnostus and
Hintzeia genera. In the Early Ordovician, this territory was located near the paleocontinent of Laurentia. == Mineral resources ==