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  2. Trilobite - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trilobite

    Exactly why the trilobites became extinct is not clear; with repeated extinction events (often followed by apparent recovery) throughout the trilobite fossil record, a combination of causes is likely. After the extinction event at the end of the Devonian period, what trilobite diversity remained was bottlenecked into the order Proetida.

  3. Late Ordovician mass extinction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Late_Ordovician_mass...

    Trilobites were hit hard by both phases of the extinction, with about 70% of genera and 50% of families going extinct between the Katian and Silurian. The extinction disproportionately affected deep water species and groups with fully planktonic larvae or adults.

  4. Ptychopariida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ptychopariida

    Ptychopariida is a large, heterogeneous order of trilobite containing some of the most primitive species known. The earliest species occurred in the second half of the Lower Cambrian, and the last species did not survive the Ordovician–Silurian extinction event. Asaphiscus wheeleri, a Cambrian trilobite of the Superfamily Ptychoparioidea

  5. Odontopleurida - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odontopleurida

    Odontopleurida is an order of very spinose trilobites closely related to the trilobites of the order Lichida. [1] Some experts group the Odontopleurid families, Odontopleuridae and Damesellidae, within Lichida. Odontopleurids tend to have convex, bar-shaped cephalons, and lobed, knob-shaped glabella that extend to, or almost to the anterior margin.

  6. Angelina (trilobite) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Angelina_(trilobite)

    Angelina Salter, 1859, [1] is a genus of ptychopariid trilobite belonging to the Family Olenidae, Suborder olenina. It lived during the Tremadocian Stage, lowermost of the two standard worldwide divisions forming the Lower Ordovician Series and lowest of the seven stages within the Ordovician System. It encompasses all rocks formed during ...

  7. Why the Amazon's biggest fish is quickly going extinct - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2014-08-14-why-the-amazons...

    The BBC notes, "of the 41 communities researchers studied, arapaima populations were extinct in eight of them." And the giant fish, which typically weighs in at more than 400 pounds, is rapidly ...

  8. 9-foot-tall ‘giant ape’ mysteriously vanished. Their caves ...

    www.aol.com/9-foot-tall-giant-ape-194516772.html

    “Its demise is enigmatic considering that it was one of the few Asian great apes to go extinct in the last 2.6 million years, whereas others, including orangutan, survived until the present.” ...

  9. Ampyx (trilobite) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ampyx_(trilobite)

    Fossils of the trilobite Ampyx priscus, dating back about 480 million years ago, have been recently described as clustered in lines along the ocean floor. The animals were all mature adults, and were all facing the same direction as though they had formed a conga line or a peloton .