Cloacaspis

Extinct genus of trilobites From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Cloacaspis is an extinct genus of olenid ptychopariid trilobite. It lived during the early part of the Arenig stage of the Ordovician Period,[1] a faunal stage which lasted from approximately 478 to 471 million years ago. Richard Fortey has proposed that these particular trilobites lived in anoxic regions of the ocean floor, and cultivated symbiotic, sulfur-metabolizing bacteria.[3]

Phylum:Arthropoda
Clade:Artiopoda
Class:Trilobita
Order:Ptychopariida
Quick facts Cloacaspis Temporal range: Early Arenig, Scientific classification ...
Cloacaspis
Temporal range: Early Arenig[1]
Cloacaspis senilis, and C. ekphymosa
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Clade: Artiopoda
Class: Trilobita
Order: Ptychopariida
Family: Olenidae
Genus: Cloacaspis
Fortey 1974 [2]
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Etymology

The generic name is a compound word from Latin, "cloaca," meaning sewer, and from Greek, "aspis," meaning "shield." Thus, Cloacaspis translate as "sewer shield." In his book, Trilobite! Eyewitness to Evolution, Fortey, who first discovered the genus in Ordovician strata in Spitsbergen, explained that the rocks they were found in had a rank, sulfurous odor, reminding him of raw sewage.[4]

References

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