Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Calyptulax trilobite cephalon from the Verulam fm.

When I first found my first Calyptulax cephalon in the Verulam formation I had to ask my friend Kevin: "What the heck is a Phacops doing in the Ordovician?" He pointed out to me that the glabella on a Calyptulax doesn't look quite like the one on a Phacops but they do both share similar eyes.



Calyptulax is a somewhat common trilobite in the Verulam with it's cephalon being the easiest part to spot. The plate below has one as well as a pygidium from a Felxicalymene among other fossil debris.


Another plate holds at least three.

An angled view of of of the cephalons from the above plate/

Kevin has been very patient and put up with my many mispronunciations of Calyptulax (Calypsolax, Collapasox, Californiax, etc.). Calyptulax is a Phacopid trilobite and is related to Flexicalymene, Greenops, Dalmanites, Dipleura as well as Phacops for which the order is named.

2 comments:

  1. That's a nice trilobite. Those plates are fantastic from there. They look like waldron plates mixed with ones from the Cincinnati basin. I need to get up there some day...

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  2. I agree and seek out the same layer that the above piece came from every time I'm up there.

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