
Scanning electron microscope examinations of polished and etched surfaces of sediments from the Silurian carbonate platform of Gotland, Sweden, revealed the presence of numerous, morphologically diverse “calcispheres” (Calcitarcha). Some of these spherical calcareous microfossils display wall structures that are surprisingly similar to those of calcareous dinoflagellate cysts. In analogy to the interpretation of the biological affinities of Palaeozoic acritarchs as cysts of organisms that might have been the ancestors of organic-walled dinoflagellates, the Calcitarcha from Gotland can be compared and may possibly be related to organisms that may have been the ancestors of calcareous cyst-producing dinoflagellates that so far have not been observed before the Late Jurassic.
Calcitarcha, Calcispheres, Calcareous dinoflagellates, Silurian, Gotland