[The Ancient Life History of the Earth by Henry Alleyne Nicholson]@TWC D-Link bookThe Ancient Life History of the Earth CHAPTER VI 5/7
Not only are all known living animals thus reducible to some five or six fundamental plans of structure, but amongst the vast series of fossil forms no one has yet been found--however unlike any existing animal--to possess peculiarities which would entitle it to be placed in a new sub-kingdom.
All fossil animals, therefore, are capable of being referred to one or other of the primary divisions of the animal kingdom.
Many fossil groups have no closely-related group now in existence; but in no case do we meet with any grand structural type which has not survived to the present day. [Footnote 9: In the Appendix a brief definition is given of the sub-kingdoms, and the chief divisions of each are enumerated.] The old types of life differ in many respects from those now upon the earth; and the further back we pass in time, the more marked does this divergence become.
Thus, if we were to compare the animals which lived in the Silurian seas with those inhabiting our present oceans, we should in most instances find differences so great as almost to place us in another world.
This divergence is the most marked in the Palaeozoic forms of life, less so in those of the Mesozoic period, and less still in the Tertiary period.
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