Over 208 described species of invertebrates have been found in the Hosselkus Limestone and nearby Brock Mountain. These species include shellfish, nautilus, snails, and ammonites. Many of these species can be also found in the
Mediterranean region, which shows a much closer connection between the American and Mediterranean regions. The Great Basin sea was then the western end of the ancient Tethys, of which the Indian sea was the eastern limit. A noteworthy feature of this fauna is the abundance of
Trachyceras in the area, as in the Mediterranean that genus had dissipated before the advent of the
Tropites fauna. This area is rather sharply separated into two faunal subzones. The lower, the
Trachyceras subzone, carries an abundance of
Trachyceras,
Tropites,
Paratropites, and
Clionites. The upper subzone carries a few survivors of the
Tropites group,
Juvavites,
Gonionotites,
Metasibrites, and
Arcestes.
Discotropites,
Sagenites, and the nautiloids occur in nearly equal numbers in the two subzones. ==Vertebrates==