Trilobite

trilobite_sketch.png

Title

Trilobite

Description

Taxonomy

Phylum: Arthropoda

Class: Trilobita

Distinctive features

Pygidium (tail)

Thorax (body)

Cephalon (head)

Paired appendages (not often preserved)

Three lobed longitudinal division of body (2x pleural, 1x axial)

Calcitic exoskeleton

Segmented body

Glabella

Eyes (holochroal or schizochroal; only present in some groups)

Eye ridges

Occipital ring

Axial rings

Stratigraphic range

Cambrian to Permian (most common Cambrian to Silurian)

Way of life

Trilobites lived as planktonic, nektonic, epifaunal and infaunal organisms in deep and shallow marine environments. They lived as predators, filter feeders, deposit feeders, particle feeders, scavengers and even symbiotically.

By looking at the functional morphology of the trilobite in question you can be more specific about how it lived, by looking at body shape, size, legs, eyes and other characters.

Advanced notes

Trilobites were very abundant during the Palaeozoic. Their preservation potential was increased further as they moulted their exoskeletons periodically as they grew. This means that one trilobite left numerous hard skeletons or partial skeletons as it grew, each of which has the potential to fossilise.

Specimens

Browse trilobites

Links

Learn about types of preservation

Collection

Citation

“Trilobite,” 1A Collections, accessed April 9, 2024, https://wserv3.esc.cam.ac.uk/p1acollections/items/show/115.