Information
Species: Crotalocephalina gibba & Reedops cephalotes.
Strata: low- Devon, Praghian, Ihandar fm
Locality: Látchana, Maider, Morocco
Dimensions of the specimen: 7,5 cm and 7,7 cm
Details: Two nice prepared specimens sharing same matrix
Trilobites hold a significant place among the earliest animals. What we know about them comes primarily from studying their fossils, which are typically the imprints of their shells preserved after being buried in sediment that later solidified into rock.
They made a sudden appearance early in the Cambrian Period, flourishing to dominate the seas of the Cambrian and early Ordovician periods. With approximately 20,000 species identified, trilobites experienced a prolonged decline before ultimately vanishing at the end of the Permian Period, around 250 million years ago.
Extracting a fossil from the rigid confines of hard limestone demands expertise, patience, and a precise touch—skills unique to seasoned fossil preparators. This intricate work goes beyond simple cleaning; it is a careful engagement with history, where the steady hum of the airscriber unveils fragments of a story etched millions of years ago.