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Although intra-species trilobite diversity seems to have peaked during the Cambrian, [30] trilobites were still active participants in the Ordovician radiation event, with a new fauna taking over from the old Cambrian one. [31] Phacopida and Trinucleioidea are characteristic forms, highly differentiated and diverse, most with uncertain ...
The Artiopoda is a grouping of extinct arthropods that includes trilobites and their close relatives. It was erected by Hou and Bergström in 1997 [5] to encompass a wide diversity of arthropods that would traditionally have been assigned to the Trilobitomorpha. Trilobites, in part due to abundance of findings owing to their mineralized ...
Fauna I, known as "Cambrian", described as a "Trilobite-rich assemblage", encompasses the bulk of the fossils which first appeared in the Cambrian explosion, and largely became extinct in the Ordovician-Silurian extinction event.
Trilobites were still present and like the Ordovician Silurian rocks are a better source of trilobite fossils than the state's Cambrian deposits. Also like the Ordovician, the superiority of Silurian rocks as a source of trilobites is due to the Silurian rocks being more accessible to collectors than the older ones. [1]
Asaphiscus wheeleri, a trilobite from the Cambrian Wheeler shale of Utah. This list of trilobites is a comprehensive listing of all genera that have ever been included in the Arthropod class Trilobita, excluding purely vernacular terms.
Isotelus, like all asaphid trilobites, did not survive past the Ordovician-Silurian mass extinction event. Asaphidae, like all other derived asaphide trilobite families, are inferred to have a unique and lengthy planktonic larval phase, only becoming benthic like adults after metamorphosis.
Trinucleidae is a family of small to average size asaphid trilobites that first occurred at the start of the Ordovician and became extinct at the end of that period. It contains approximately 227 species divided over 51 genera in 5 subfamilies. [1] The most conspicuous character is the wide perforated fringe of the head.
Elrathia is a genus of trilobite belonging to Ptychopariacea known from the mid-Cambrian of Laurentia (North America). [2] E. kingii is one of the most common trilobite fossils in the USA [3] locally found in extremely high concentrations within the Wheeler Formation in the U.S. state of Utah. [4] E. kingii has been considered the most ...