Besides Dinosaurs,
Trilobites are also a famous and well-studied species from prehistory. Unlike Dinosaurs, who are two distinct groupings
of animals artificially placed in one Superorder, Trilobites occur naturally as
Class of Marine Arthropods. This Class
of ancient sea animals consists of 10 Orders, 150 families, 5000 genera, and
20,000 (and counting) discovered species.
Found worldwide, They differed according to the particular water depth,
temperature and geography of the world’s oceans where They lived.
All Trilobites have the same basic
body plan, which consists of a head (cephalon), a body (thorax), and a tail (pygidium). These marine animals received their name which
means “three lobed” from their three side to side lobes – left (pleural),
central (axial), and right. Beyond this standard
body, many Trilobites developed unique features such as sharp spines or
horseshoe-shaped heads.
This diversity in adaptation enabled
Trilobites to be one of the longest surviving species in the world. Believed to have emerged about 700 million
years ago (mya) during the Pre-Cambrian Eon, Trilobites came into their own about
500 mya during the Cambrian Life Explosion.
Living through the entire Paleozoic Era (about 300 million years in
duration), They became extinct during the Great Dying of the Permian Period
(about 250 mya).
Besides being noted for their
longevity, Trilobites were also one of the first animals on earth to possess
eyes. Their eyes were made of calcite
crystals laid out in rows of 100 to 15,000 lenses. Using their eyes, Trilobites could sense
movement, which helped Them to hunt as well as to hide from Predators. Once early animals developed eyes, the
predator-prey dynamic took hold.
Since They were so common and
widespread in the Paleozoic Era, Trilobites are studied in great detail by
paleontologists to understand the processes of early evolution. In fact, They were the first extinct animals
to be studied by early scientists. Since
the fossils of Trilobites were readily found in Burgess-Shale type deposits,
paleontologists could trace the beginning of complex life systems by examining
the developments of Trilobites.
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