Paradoxidoidea


The Paradoxididae are a superfamily of trilobites, a group of extinct marine arthropods. They occurred during the late Lower Cambrian and disappeared at the end of the Middle Cambrian.

Description

Species in this superfamily can be average to very large, are relatively flat, have an inverted egg-shaped outline, a glabella that in early genera has parallel sides and expands forward in later representatives, and approaches or reaches the frontal border. All species have an almost semicircular headshield with long backward directed genal spines. The facial suture in front of the eye diverges forward and outward in the Paradoxididae, while in the Centropleuridae it runs outward and even a bit backward. The articulate middle part of the body consists of 14 to 21 segments ending in sickle-shaped spines that to the back curve increasingly further backwards or in bluntly truncated tips. While in the Paradoxididae the frontal two segments may be more robust, the thorax of the Centropleuridae is characterize by longer backward directed sickle shaped spines on the three rear thorax segments. The tailshield is typically small with an entire margin in Paradoxididae, and medium-sized with 2 or 3 pairs of marginal spines in the Centropleuridae.

Key to the families