Paladin (trilobite)
Appearance
Paladin Temporal range: Carboniferous – Permian,
| |
---|---|
Artist's reconstruction of Paladin morrowensis. | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Arthropoda |
Class: | †Trilobita |
Order: | †Proetida |
Family: | †Proetidae |
Genus: | †Paladin Weller, 1936[1] |
Paladin is a genus of trilobite which lived 354–259 Ma, during the Late Paleozoic era; more specifically, during the Carboniferous and Permian periods. It was widespread: fossils have been discovered in what are now East Asia, Europe and North America.[2][3][4]
The genus was erected in 1936 by J. M. Weller.[1] The name derives from the paladins, the semi-legendary twelve foremost knights of Emperor Charlemagne (748–814).
Paladin was a fast-moving low-level epifaunal deposit feeder; that is, it scavenged at the bottom of shallow marine or brackish waters.
Species
[edit]Approximately fifty species have been assigned to the genus;[5] the following are accepted:[2]
- P. eichwaldi shunnerensis (King, 1914). 326.4–318.1 Ma, Great Shunner Fell, England. Synonyms Griffithides shunnerensis, P. shunnerensis, Weberides shunnerensis.
- P. helmsensis (Whittington, 1954). 339.4–318.1 Ma, Texas.
- P. iwaizakiensis (Kobayashi and Hamada, 1984). 265.0–259.0 Ma, Japan.
- P. morrowensis (Mather, 1915). 318.1–314.6 Ma, Oklahoma. Synonym Griffithides morrowensis.
- P. mucronatus (Girty, 1910). 339.4–336.0 Ma, Arkansas and Oklahoma. Synonym Griffithides mucronatus.
- P. opisthops (Kobayashi and Hamada, 1979). 314.6-306.95 Ma, Thailand.
- P. veeravurusi (Kobayashi and Hamada, 1979). 314.6-306.95 Ma, Thailand.
References
[edit]- ^ a b Weller, J. M. (1936). "Carboniferous trilobite genera". J. Paleontol. 10 (8): 704–714.
- ^ a b "Paladin Weller 1936 (trilobite)". Fossilworks.
- ^ "Paladin Weller, 1936". GBIF.
- ^ "Paladin". Mindat.org.
- ^ Brezinski, David R. (2003). "Evolutionary and Biogeographical Implications of Phylogenetic Analysis of the Late Palaeozoic Trilobite Paladin" (PDF). Special Papers in Palaeontology. 70. Palaeontological Association: 363–375.