Trilobites - British Geological Survey (2024)

...Home » Discovering Geology » Fossils and geological time » Trilobites

Discovering Geology — Fossils and geological time

Share this articleFacebookTwitterPinterestWhatsAppEmailCopy Link

Trilobites rank among the most important early animals. Our knowledge of them has been gained from the study of their fossils, usually the impressions left of their shells after burial in sediment that subsequently hardened into rock.

They appeared abruptly in the early part of the Cambrian Period and came to dominate the Cambrian and early Ordovician seas. A prolonged decline then set in before they finally became extinct at the end of the Permian Period, about 250 million years ago.

  • The animal
  • Environment
  • The geologists’ tool
  • Fun facts
  • 3D fossil models

The animal

Like many invertebrate animals living today, including crustaceans, spiders and insects, trilobites were arthropods, belonging to the phylum Arthropoda. Geologists know that they were marine animals because of the rocks in which they are found and the other types of fossils associated with them.

For support and protection, the soft parts of the animal were covered by an exoskeleton. Usually only the dorsal part of the exoskeleton, covering the animal’s back, was fossilised. The ventral (underside) part of the animal may have been covered by a soft membrane or other material that could not be fossilised.

The exoskeleton is divided from anterior (front) to posterior (back) into:

  • cephalon (head-shield)
  • thorax
  • pygidium (tail-shield)

It is also divided from side-to-side into a central axis, with two side regions (lobes) called pleurae. The word ‘trilobite’ refers to this side-to-side partition, rather than the cephalon, thorax and pygidium.

The cephalon, thorax and pygidium are all divided into segments. In life, the segments of the cephalon and pygidium were fused, but those of the thorax were not, enabling the animal to roll into a ball to protect its relatively vulnerable ventral side in times of danger.

The central region of the cephalon is termed the glabella. The cheeks on either side of the glabella are usually traversed by a facial suture that separates them into fixed cheeks (adjoining the glabella) and free cheeks on the outer edge of the cephalon. The suture helped the animal to moult during growth. When moulting, the trilobite’s cast-off exoskeleton often fell to pieces, so their fossilised remains are usually found as fragments.

Eyes and other sensory organs

Most trilobites had eyes, although blind forms are known. The eyes are situated on the inner edge of the free cheek, adjacent to the fixed cheek.

Trilobites had compound eyes, consisting of a number of separate lenses. The number of lenses and the complexity of the eye structure varied enormously. Some trilobites had large, convex compound eyes (like a fly’s) with a large number of lenses, giving them a wide field of view forwards, backwards, sideways, upwards and even downwards, depending on the actual curvature of the eye. Other trilobites had much smaller eyes, with fewer lenses, giving them a more restricted view.

Many trilobite eyes consisted simply of closely packed prisms of calcite, but in some later forms, for example the Silurian–Devonian genus Phacops, the eyes had more complex lenses. Using these, Phacops may have been able to see an object clearly and even estimate how far away it was.

Other sensory organs possessed by trilobites included pits, canals, tubercles and spines on the surface of the exoskeleton.

Soft parts

Soft parts, preserved under special circ*mstances insedimentary deposits known as Lagerstätten (singular Lagerstätte), are known for a few trilobite species. From these, geologists know that trilobites had a pair of jointed antennae protruding forwards from beneath the cephalon and rows of jointed limbs on each side of the body.

There were three pairs of limbs beneath the cephalon and a single pair of limbs beneath each segment of the thorax and pygidium. Each limb had two branches: a lower branch used for walking and an upper branch bearing a large number of fine filaments, which may have been used for respiration.

Environment

There is some evidence that particular trilobites lived at certain depths in the sea, so they can be used as indicators of palaeoenvironment.Neseuretusis an example of a genus that is associated with very shallow water deposits, whereas trinucleid trilobites, such asWhittardolithus, are thought to have lived on a deep sea bottom.

The great variety of body shapes and sizes indicate that trilobites occupied a variety ofecological niches. Blind trilobites may have burrowed and scavenged in mud on the sea floor, or lived at great depth in the sea where there was no light. Other trilobites are associated with trails on bedding planes (e.g.Cruziana), which show that they moved about on the sea-floor, perhaps scavenging or preying on other animals. These trilobites were part of thebenthos (sea floor dwelling lifeforms). Yet more trilobites, such asCyclopyge, had large eyes that enabled them to see downwards as well as in other directions. This, together with their widespread distribution, has led geologists to think that they swam or floated above the sea floor.

Many trilobites were 3–6cm long, but some such asParadoxideswere giants, up to 60cm or more, while others like the tiny, blind agnostid trilobites were no more than a few millimetres long.

The geologists’ tool

Trilobites appeared in the Cambrian Period and became extinct at the end of the Permian Period. In Britain, trilobites occur in rocks of Cambrian, Ordovician and Silurian age, for example in Wales and the Welsh Borderland, in Devonian rocks of south-west England and in Carboniferous rocks, for example in Lancashire.

Geologists use trilobites in a variety of ways to help them understand how the Earth has developed. One use is in the relative dating and stratigraphical correlation of sedimentary rocksuccessions, especially in rocks of Cambrian and early Ordovician age. Trilobites are particularly important for correlating Cambrian rocks. Paradoxides, for example, occurs in rocks in England, Wales, Newfoundland, Sweden, Spain and Siberia, and shows that these rocks are all of the same, middle Cambrian age. Other stratigraphically useful trilobites include species of Merlinia in the early Ordovician and Calymene in the Silurian.

Trilobites - British Geological Survey (28)

Another use of trilobites in geology is in reconstructing past geographies (palaeogeography) and past environments (palaeoenvironments). The early Ordovician trilobite Petigurus is found in north-west Scotland but nowhere else in Britain, although it can be found in North America. Early Ordovician trilobites from England and Wales (e.g. Placoparia) are unlike those from North America, but are also found in France, Spain, Portugal, Bohemia and North Africa. This is part of the evidence showing that much of Scotland was close to North America about 500 million years ago and was separated from southern Britain by an ocean that has been named Iapetus.

Trilobites - British Geological Survey (30)

Fun facts

3D fossil models

Many of the fossils in theBGS palaeontology collectionsare available to view and download as 3D models. To view this fossil, or others like it, in 3D visit GB3D Type Fossils.

Reference

Molyneux, S G. 1999. Trilobites: fossil focus. (Nottingham, UK: British Geological Survey.)

You may also be interested in

Discovering Geology

Discovering Geology introduces a range of geoscience topics to school-age students and learners of all ages.

Show more

Fossils and geological time

Take a look at the history of the Earth, from its formation over four and a half billion years ago to present times.

Show more

Fossils

What is a fossil and why do we study them? Explore the different methods of fossil preservation.

Show more

Was this page helpful?

Trilobites - British Geological Survey (2024)
Top Articles
55 Adorable Snoopy Quotes to Enlighten - AnQuotes.com
200+ Snoopy Wednesday Quotes
Poe T4 Aisling
Tattoo Shops Lansing Il
Dairy Queen Lobby Hours
Shoe Game Lit Svg
Danielle Moodie-Mills Net Worth
Danatar Gym
Meer klaarheid bij toewijzing rechter
Sissy Transformation Guide | Venus Sissy Training
Craigslist Chautauqua Ny
Www.paystubportal.com/7-11 Login
Taylor Swift Seating Chart Nashville
Citymd West 146Th Urgent Care - Nyc Photos
Shreveport Active 911
Sony E 18-200mm F3.5-6.3 OSS LE Review
Apne Tv Co Com
Amazing deals for DKoldies on Goodshop!
Bing Chilling Words Romanized
Www.publicsurplus.com Motor Pool
Amortization Calculator
The BEST Soft and Chewy Sugar Cookie Recipe
Directions To Nearest T Mobile Store
Kabob-House-Spokane Photos
4 Methods to Fix “Vortex Mods Cannot Be Deployed” Issue - MiniTool Partition Wizard
Giantbodybuilder.com
Remnants of Filth: Yuwu (Novel) Vol. 4
HP PARTSURFER - spare part search portal
Pdx Weather Noaa
25Cc To Tbsp
Grand Teton Pellet Stove Control Board
2012 Street Glide Blue Book Value
آدرس جدید بند موویز
Help with your flower delivery - Don's Florist & Gift Inc.
Etowah County Sheriff Dept
Best Workers Compensation Lawyer Hill & Moin
Culver's of Whitewater, WI - W Main St
MSD Animal Health Hub: Nobivac® Rabies Q & A
Davis Fire Friday live updates: Community meeting set for 7 p.m. with Lombardo
Squalicum Family Medicine
Leland Westerlund
Enter The Gungeon Gunther
Ronnie Mcnu*t Uncensored
Ewwwww Gif
Lux Funeral New Braunfels
Metra Union Pacific West Schedule
Vrca File Converter
Craigslist Charlestown Indiana
Predator revo radial owners
Guidance | GreenStar™ 3 2630 Display
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Nicola Considine CPA

Last Updated:

Views: 5977

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (49 voted)

Reviews: 88% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Nicola Considine CPA

Birthday: 1993-02-26

Address: 3809 Clinton Inlet, East Aleisha, UT 46318-2392

Phone: +2681424145499

Job: Government Technician

Hobby: Calligraphy, Lego building, Worldbuilding, Shooting, Bird watching, Shopping, Cooking

Introduction: My name is Nicola Considine CPA, I am a determined, witty, powerful, brainy, open, smiling, proud person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.