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PHACOPS TRILOBITE LAB
PREPPED
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Hamar Laghdad Formation - Erfoud, Morocco
DEVONIAN PERIOD: 395 - 345 million years ago
Phacops speculator is a classic Devonian Era trilobite from the
Atlas formation. The prominent pustulose surface on the glabella
and the wonderful compound eyes are features one can never tire of
admiring.
This
example features a nicely positioned creature outstretched in pose.
Fine pustulose detail throughout. BOTH eyes show wonderful
multi-lens detail. Excellent overall preservation with full
inflation. Very good lab-prepared specimen showing nice clean
contrasting matrix original to the specimen.
Trilobites
are hard-shelled, segmented creatures that lived hundreds of millions of
years ago in the Earth's ancient seas. They are considered to be
one of our planet's earliest complex life-forms and are one of the key
signature creatures of the Paleozoic Era. Trilobites went extinct
before dinosaurs even existed.
Next to
dinosaur fossils, trilobites command a dedicated and passionate
following amongst both scientists and fossil collectors, alike. In
a relatively short time-frame (scientifically speaking, of course), we
have the emergence and subsequent extinction of these fascinating
creatures. Still most baffling is the incredible diversity of
sizes and features that made up the trilobite group. Many bizarre
species co-existed with highly specialized body parts that defy the
theories of evolution in their "sudden" emergence and diversity during
the Early Cambrian Period in what is known as the 'Cambrian
Explosion'.
Trilobites were among the world's first arthropods, a phylum of
hard-shelled creatures with multiple body segments and jointed legs
(although the legs, antennae and other finer structures of trilobites
only very rarely are preserved). They constitute an extinct class
of arthropods, Trilobita, that is comprised of over 15,000 known
species.
It has been
reported that every year, four to five new species are discovered in the
Atlas and Anti-Atlas Mountain regions in Morocco, alone! This
desolate northern fringe of the Sahara Desert was once covered by a
prehistoric ocean and its fossil deposits can be considered the world's
richest and most diverse source of these ancient sea creatures.
Trilobites are the single most diverse group of extinct organisms that
ever existed, period! The smallest known trilobite is just three
millimeters long, while the largest type grew to a length of 70
centimeters (over two feet long!). The most common fossil of trilobites
is the mineralized dorsal exoskeleton of the creature. This is
found in partial form from molting (shedding the shell as it grows) or
in complete form when the animal was buried and died intact. The
soft parts of the underside are rarely preserved. The name
'TRILOBITE' means 'three lobed" and is derived from the fact these
animals had bodies featuring three longitudinal
lobes, not lateral (head, body, tail) as is often thought. The
lateral division of three parts is shared by many arthropods, not just
trilobites.
Considerable study has been done on trilobites as a whole organism.
Even more fascinating though, is the research done on a microscopic
level with regards to trilobite morphology.
Radiographs have captured incredible detail of complete and fully
articulated antennae and underparts like legs and gills, preserved in
the host rock of some fossilized specimens. Perhaps the most
impressive and classic feature of trilobites that comes to mind is the
eyes. Microscopic studies of trilobite eye structures have also
revealed marvelous adaptation and very high degrees of specialization in
vision.
It seems
that the more we learn about trilobites, the unfolding of their mystery
is stranger than fiction. Certainly we gain a greater appreciation
with each new discovery of these strange and highly advanced but now
extinct 'butterflies of the ancient seas'.
NICE
OUTSTRETCHED EXAMPLE WITH VERY FULL INFLATION AND FINE DETAIL
3.5"
by 2.25" with original matrix, trilobite 2" in length
SOLD
TR25-006
Actual
Item - One Only
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