Olenoides


Olenoides was a trilobite from the Cambrian period. Its fossils are found well-preserved in the Burgess Shale in Canada. It grew up to long.

Etymology

Olenoides – from Olenus, in Greek mythology a man who, along with his wife Lethaea, was turned to stone. Olenus was used for a trilobite genus name in 1827; the suffix -oides was added later.

Discussion

Olenoides followed the basic structure of all trilobites — a cephalon, a thorax with seven jointed parts, and finally a semicircular pygidium. Its antennae were long, and curved back along its sides. Its thin legs show that it was no swimmer, instead crawling along the sea floor in search of prey. This is also evidenced by fossil tracks that have been found. Conspicuous W-shaped wounds, often partially healed, on Olenoides specimens may be due to predation by Anomalocaris.
Its major characteristics are a large parallel-sided glabella, deep interpleural furrows on the pygidium, and slender pygidial spines, as well as the fact that it is the most common limb-bearing trilobite species in the Burgess Shale.
Specimens have been found in the Marjumian of the United States. General Cambrian fossils have been found in Canada, Greenland, Kazakhstan, Russia, and the USA.
213 specimens of Olenoides are known from the Greater Phyllopod bed, where they comprise 0.4% of the community. The Burgess Shale's preservative qualities have helped Olenoides become one of the best known of trilobites.

Synonyms

Olenoides was formerly known as Neolenus. Species of Kootenia are no longer considered different enough from those in Olenoides to warrant placement in a separate genus.

Species

O. nevadensisO. sassikaspaO. serratusO. superbusO. dawsoni O. burgessensis O. buttsi O. convexus O. incertus
  • ''O. pennsylvanicus''

Description

Olenoides is an average size trilobite has six axial rings that decrease in size backwards and four or five pairs of rearward pointing marginal spines. Cephalon, thorax and pygidium are of approximately equal length.
Olenoides serratus is one of about twenty species of which the non-calcified parts are known, due to so-called soft tissue preservation. The antennae are the most anterior pair of appendages in trilobites. In O. serratus, these are attached about halfway the immediately adjacent to the hypostome, and appear from the dorsal side under the cephalon in front of the side of the glabella. They were flexible, having a tubular shape that became narrower towards anterior and composed of between 40 and 50 segments that are each shorter than wide. Olenellus serratus is the only known trilobite with cerci, uniramous appendages on ventral side of last pygidial segment, and these are shaped like the antennas.