Pricyclopyge

Pricyclopyge
Temporal range: Ordovician
P. binodosa
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Trilobita
Order: Asaphida
Family: Cyclopygidae
Genus: Pricyclopyge
Richter & Richter, 1954
Type species
Aeglina prisca
Species
  • P. prisca (Barrande, 1872)
  • P. binodosa (Salter, 1859)
    • P. b. binodosa
    • P. b. eurycephala Fortey & Owens, 1987
    • P. b. synophthalma (Koucek, 1916)

Pricyclopyge is a genus of trilobites assigned to the family Cyclopygidae that occurs throughout the Ordovician. Pricyclopyge had an extratropical distribution, and there is evidence that it lived in darker parts of the water column (around 175m deep). Pricyclopyge has huge eyes, an inverted pear-shaped glabella, six thorax segments, with on the 3rd two small discs.[1][2] Pricyclopyge is known from what are today China, the Czech Republic, France, and the United Kingdom.[3]

  1. ^ R.C. Moore, ed. (1959). Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Part O – Arthropoda 1 – Arthropoda general features, Proarthropoda, Euarthropoda general features, Trilobitomorpha. Geological Society of America and University of Kansas Press.
  2. ^ Whittington, H. B. et al. (1997) Treatise on Invertebrate Paleontology. Part O, Revised, Volume 1 – Trilobita – Introduction, Order Agnostida, Order Redlichiida.
  3. ^ Paleobiology Database