Gogia

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Gogia
Fossil range: Mid Cambrian
Gogia ojenai
Gogia ojenai
Conservation status
Extinct (fossil)
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Echinodermata
Subphylum: Blastozoa
Class: Eocrinoidea
Miller, 1821
Genus: Gogia
Species
  • G. spiralis
  • G. ojenai

Gogia was was one of the first, if not the first known, genus of the early echinoderm class, Eocrinoidea, from the Cambrian.

Gogia, like other eocrinoids, were not closely related to the true crinoids, instead, being more closely related to the blastoids.

Gogia is distinguished from sea lilies, and most other blastoids, in that the plate-covered body was shaped like a vase, or a bowling pin (with the pin part stuck into the substrate), and that the five arms were split into pairs of coiled, ribbon-like strands.

As a whole, the Eocrinoids were believed to be ancestral to Blastoidea.