1925
DOI: 10.1144/gsl.jgs.1925.081.01-04.12
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The Development of Leptoplastus Salteri (Callaway), and of other Trilobites (Olenidæ, Ptychoparidæ, Conocoryphidæ, Paradoxidæ, Phacopidæ, and Mesonacidæ)

Abstract: I. Introduction. The above-named species of Olenid was first recorded in 1874 by Callaway from the Shineton Shales of Shropshire, which he then claimed as of Tremadoc age. It was described from imperfect material as a Conocoryphe , which name in 1877 he corrected to Olenus , giving at the same time a description of the entire trilobite. A specimen for the first time exhibiting dorsal spines was in… Show more

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Cited by 46 publications
(30 citation statements)
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“…In A. konincki, segment generation continued throughout ontogeny, and it is not possible to recognize 'completed' postcephalic exoskeletons. Hence neither Raw's (1925) nor Stubblefield's (1926) definition of holaspis applies to this species, although there is an ontogenetic transition analogous to the meraspid-holaspid transition. In other trilobites, meraspid pygidia are referred to as 'transitory' because they represent a dynamic balance between segment generation and anterior budding into the thorax (see Whittington 1959, p. 135).…”
Section: Implications Of the Pattern Of Segmental Variation In A Konmentioning
confidence: 92%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…In A. konincki, segment generation continued throughout ontogeny, and it is not possible to recognize 'completed' postcephalic exoskeletons. Hence neither Raw's (1925) nor Stubblefield's (1926) definition of holaspis applies to this species, although there is an ontogenetic transition analogous to the meraspid-holaspid transition. In other trilobites, meraspid pygidia are referred to as 'transitory' because they represent a dynamic balance between segment generation and anterior budding into the thorax (see Whittington 1959, p. 135).…”
Section: Implications Of the Pattern Of Segmental Variation In A Konmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…This pattern ofposterior tagmosis provides a synapomorphy for all skeletonized (and possibly also soft-bodied) trilobites (Briggs & Fortey 1992;Fortey & Wittington 1989;Ramskold & Edgecombe 1991). In skeletonized trilobites, at least two major ontogenetic transitions are recognized, based on the development of the postcephalic region (Beecher 1895;Raw 1925). These are the appearance of articulation separating the cephalic and postcephalic shields (defining the protaspis to meraspis transition) and the termination ofaddition of segments to the thorax (defining the meraspis to holaspis transition).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Phases of cephalic development.-Trilobite ontogeny is tradi tionally subdivided into the protaspid, meraspid, and holaspid pe riods (Beecher, 1895;Raw, 1925; reviewed by Chatterton and Speyer, 1997), based on the nature of trunk articulation. The si licified Nephrolenellus material described here is invariably dis articulated, and knowledge of early ontogeny is restricted to ce phalic morphology alone.…”
Section: Subdivisions Of Cephalic Development In Nephrolenellusmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It has been speculated that earlier, morphologically distinct, less-mineralized larval forms may have existed, but whether the so-called phaselus larvae are indeed those of trilobites remains somewhat contentious and uncertain (Fortey and Morris, 1978; Hughes et al, 2006). The transition from the protaspid to the meraspid (Raw, 1925) period is marked by the separation of the cephalon from the trunk and the development of an articulation between the two tagmata (Whittington, 1957). Further molts produce a thorax of freely articulating segments (in contrast to the fused segments of the pygidium).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%