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Agnostida: Difference between revisions

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I love the joke :-)
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Revision as of 18:28, 14 April 2001

Trilobita that aren't entirely sure whether or not God exists. Just kidding. Seriously, the Agnostids were important as a sideline and as a major component of Ordovician plankton.


Agnostida first appeared toward the end of the Lower Cambrian, and thrived in the Middle Cambrian. The last agnostids held out until the late Ordovician. The Agnostida are divided into two suborders that are then divided into a number of families. One suborder is the Eodiscidae which has two families. Pagetides appear to be normal trilobites with only two or three segments in the thorax. Eodiscids, look quite a bit like the Pagetids except that the cephalons lack eyes, free cheeks, and look somewhat untrilobite like. Members of the suborder Agnostina are generally referred to simply as 'Agnostids' even though they probably should be called 'Agnostines'. They have pygidia that look much like their cephalons and neither looks much like the corresponding regions of other trilobites. There has been more than one argument about which end is the 'head'.


Unfortunately, the appendages are known only for one genus of Agnostid. The legs of that one genus look much more like crustacean legs than the legs on other trilobites with preserved appendages. This has caused many taxonomists to question whether the Agnostids truly are trilobites. Another view is that the agnostids represent the first line to have diverged from the trilobites. However, four orders of trilobites (Redlichiida, Corynexochida, Naraoidia, Ptychopariida) considerably predate the earliest Agnostids in the fossil record.