Three hundred and eleven articulate brachiopods, with extensive geographic coverage, spanning the Cambrian to Silurian stratigraphic interval, were analyzed for oxygen and carbon isotopic composition. Cambrian samples have delta-O-18 less-than-or-equal-to 7, parts per thousand, Ordovician samples less-than-or-equal-to -2.4 parts per thousand, and Silurian samples less-than-or-equal-to -1.9 parts per thousand, confirming the previously established trend towards lighter isotopic compositions with increasing age throughout the Lower Paleozoic. Forty-nine "best preserved" Ordovician and Silurian samples were identified based on scanning electron microscopy and trace element analysis. They were found to bracket the isotopic compositions of over 85% of specimens from these stratigraphic intervals supporting widespread preservation of the isotopic signal. Some latest Ordovician and Lower Ludlovian samples associated with shale sequences are apparently "enriched" in O-18. These are interpreted as an environmental phenomenon, perhaps related to water temperature and glaciation. A number of Silurian samples of varying genera and stratigraphic levels are highly enriched in C-13, up to +6 parts per thousand. Some are shale related, but some are associated with carbonate-bearing basins. These are also thought to represent "near-original" compositions, but a single environmental cause is unknown. The present data show that luminescence is not decisive criterion for evaluating the degree of brachiopod preservation. Whole-shell values were isotopically similar to their nonluminescent portions for both oxygen and carbon.