Ceraurus
Ceraurus Temporal range:
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File:Ceraurus plus baby, Late Ordovician, Trenton Group, Quebec, Canada - Houston Museum of Natural Science - DSC01562.JPG | |
Fossil Ceraurus with baby. | |
Scientific classification Edit this classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | †Trilobita |
Order: | †Phacopida |
Family: | †Cheiruridae |
Genus: | †Ceraurus |
Ceraurus is a genus of cheirurid trilobite of the middle and, much more rarely, the upper Ordovician. They are commonly found in strata of the lower Great Lakes region. These trilobites have eleven thoracic segments, a very small pygidium and long genal and pygidial spines. Ceraurus is quite common in the Ordovician of upstate New York, south-central and south-eastern Ontario, and the St. Lawrence Valley in Quebec, as well as in the Canadian Arctic. It and similar genera range in size from less than quarter an inch to well over five inches. Similar genera of trilobites occur in the Ordovician outcrops of the Volkhov River, near St. Petersburg, Russia. The taxonomy of the genus is problematic, as the many variations of eye placement, decoration patterns of pustules, and spine length call the genus' defining characteristics into question. Ceraurus may, in fact, be at least four genera: Ceraurus sensu stricto, and the genera, Gabriceraurus, Bufoceraurus and Leviceraurus.
References
- Ludvigsen, Rolf, Fossils of Ontario: Part I: The Trilobites. Toronto: Royal Ontario Museum, 1983.[1]
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- Cheiruridae
- Phacopida genera
- Extinct animals of North America
- Ordovician trilobites of North America
- Middle Ordovician first appearances
- Late Ordovician extinctions
- Bromide Formation
- Paleozoic life of Ontario
- Verulam Formation
- Paleozoic life of British Columbia
- Paleozoic life of the Northwest Territories
- Paleozoic life of Nunavut
- Paleozoic life of Quebec
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- Phacopida stubs