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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 May 2009
Disk small, membranous, often indistinct, a character which separates this genus from Ophiura. Rays very long, slender, depressed, formed of circles of plates, four in each circle; the lateral plates are the largest, most prominent, and provided with long spines; the basal plates are small and spiniferous, and the dorsal smooth and without clothing. Mouth plates small and triangular. All the species known have been found in the Jurassic rocks.
1 Extracted from the Dorset Natural History and Antiquarian Field Club, vol. iv. p.56, printed at the “Journal” Offices, South Street, Sherborne.