
thumb|right|The exoskeleton of a [[spiny lobster is made of a series of sclerites, connected by flexible joints.]] A sclerite (Greek , ', meaning "hard") is a hardened body part. In various branches of biology the term is applied to various structures, but not as a rule to vertebrate anatomical features such as bones and teeth. Instead it refers most commonly to the hardened parts of arthropod exoskeletons and the internal spicules of invertebrates such as certain sponges and soft corals. In paleontology, a scleritome''' is the complete set of sclerites of an organism, often all that is known
thumb|right|The exoskeleton of a [[spiny lobster is made of a series of sclerites, connected by flexible joints.]] A sclerite (Greek , ', meaning "hard") is a hardened body part. In various branches of biology the term is applied to various structures, but not as a rule to vertebrate anatomical features such as bones and teeth. Instead it refers most commonly to the hardened parts of arthropod exoskeletons and the internal spicules of invertebrates such as certain sponges and soft corals. In paleontology, a scleritome' is the complete set of sclerites of an organism, often all that is known from fossil invertebrates.
==Sclerites in combination== Sclerites may occur practically isolated in an organism, such as the sting of a cone shell. Also, they can be more or less scattered, such as tufts of defensive sharp, mineralised bristles as in many marine polychaetes. Or, they can occur as structured, but unconnected or loosely connected arrays, such as the mineral "teeth" in the radula of many Mollusca, the valves of chitons, the beak of a cephalopod, or the articulated exoskeletons of Arthropoda.
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).