Trimerus

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File:Trimerus delphinocephalus cephalon.jpg
An isolated fossil cephalon from the trilobite Trimerus (Trimerus) delphinocephalus, missing some of the anterior portion. Collected from the Rochester Shale in Canada. Pores for setae are visible marginally.

Trimerus is an extinct genus of trilobite in the family Homalonotidae. Trimerus is one of North America's largest trilobites, reaching over Template:Convert in length. It had a thorax composed of 13 segments with weak trilobation, a large subtriangular head terminating in an expanded rostral plate, a two-pronged hypostome, and a triangular pygidium. It is known from all continents except for Antarctica. Its tiny compound eyes and the shovel-like anterior of the head suggests a burrowing lifestyle, and an exoskeleton marked with many small pores which, in life, probably housed hair-like sensory setae in life, allowed the trilobite to feel which portions of its body were covered with sediment.[1]

Species

In his description of new Homalonotid species from Australia and New Zealand, Andrew Sandford divided Trimerus species into multiple subgenera to better categorize distinct populations.[2] A number of species previously assigned to other genera were included, and a number of species previously assigned to Trimerus were excluded, variously reassigned to the trilobite genera Dipleura (Dipleura dekayi has been frequently included within Trimerus), Digonus, Burmeisteria, and Wenndorfia. The following list is therefore provisional, and other sources may differ.[3][4] A handful of species also remain undescribed.

Trimerus (Trimerus)
This group is known only from the Silurian (Wenlock to Ludlow).

Trimerus (Edgillia)
This group is known from the Late Silurian to the Early Devonian. Named after E. D. Gill, for his contributions to Australian paleontology, including naming a number of Homalonotid trilobites.

Trimerus (Ramiotis)
This group is known only from the Silurian. Named for Otis Rami, the son of the author.[2]

The following species have not been assigned to a subgenus.

References

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