Cephalonega stepanovi is a fossil organism from Ediacaran deposites of the Arkhangelsk Region, Russia. It was described by Mikhail A. Fedonkin in 1976
Etymology
Its original generic nameOnega comes from the Onega Peninsula of the White Sea, where the first fossils were found. The specific name is given in honour of V. A. Stepanov, discoverer of the first Ediacaran fossil locality in Arkhangelsk Region, on the Letniy Bereg of the Onega Peninsula in 1972. The original generic name is preoccupied by the hemipteran genus Onega Distant. Ivantsov et al. coined a replacement generic name Cephalonega.
Morphology
The small fossils, which range up to long, have oval outlines and low bodies with an articulated central zone built of isomers encircled by an undivided zone. The surface of the undivided region of Cephalonega is covered with small tubercles. Cephalonega was originally described by Mikhail Fedonkin as a problematic organism, being grouped together with Vendia, Praecambridium and Vendomia as possible stem-group arthropods due to a vague similarity with primitiveCambrian trilobites and arthropods. In 1985 Mikhail Fedonkin erected PhylumProarticulata, in which he placed: Cephalonega, Dickinsonia, Palaeoplatoda, Vendia, Vendomia, Praecambridium and Pseudovendia sp., although he did not exclude the possibility that Cephalonega may still be related to various lower Cambrian arthropods, such as Skania. Andrey Yu. Ivantsov has proposed that Cephalonega be placed in phylum Proarticulata, as the segments in recently discovered, exceptionally well-preserved fossils display the glide, or "staggered", symmetry characteristic of the majority of proarticulatans. According to a recent study, all Cephalonega researchers agree that it is proarticulatan and put in a class Cephalozoa that also includes e.g. Yorgia, Andiva and Spriggina.
Fossil record
Imprints of Cephalonega stepanovi have been found in the Verkhovka and Zimnie Gory Formations of the Ediacaran rocks of the Arkhangelsk Region, Russia. All the fossil specimens are negative imprints on the bases of fine-grained sandstone beds with the "elephant skin" and tubercle texture diagnostic of microbial mats. The same bedding planes contain various other Ediacaran species: Cyclomedusa, Ediacaria, Palaeopascichnids, Eoporpita, Yorgia, Andiva, Archaeaspinus, Vendia, Dickinsonia, Anfesta, Albumares, Tribrachidium, Kimberella, Parvancorina, Charniodiscus and others.