Fossil.net.com presented by EXTINCTIONS Inc.
To Order Toll Free Call 1-877-EXTINCT   Sunday May 05, 2024 at 7:25:54 PM (EST)
 
Fossil.net ONLINE MUSEUM
 
Search:  

18167 Individual Specimens and Counting...
 
 
  Site Map

 
Dinosaurs
- Dinosaur Teeth
- Dinosaur Claws
- Dinosaur Eggs
- Dinosaur Tracks
- Dinosaur Bones
Keichousaurs
Mosasaurs
Crocs / Gators
Turtles
Birds
Shark Teeth
Fossil Fish
Cave Bears
   Mammoths
Oreodonts
Bison
Other Vertebrates
Trilobites
Eurypterids
Crabs
   Shrimp
Lobsters
Fossil Insects
Insects in Amber
Other Arthropods
Crinoids
Cystoids
Blastoids
   Echinoids
Starfish
Other Echinoderms
   Ammonites
Other Cephalopods
Brachiopods
Gastropods
Bivalves
Corals
Sponges
Bryozoans
Other Invertebrates
Fossil Plants
- Leaves
- Ferns
- Cones
- Flowers
- Petrified Wood
Amber (Fossil Sap)
   Stromatolite

Coins / Currency

Books
Sculpted Stone
Replicas
Meteorites
Minerals

 
Back to Archive

Cool Triarthrus eatoni with Pyritized Antennae and Legs

   
Name: Triarthrus eatoni
Age:  Upper Ordovician
Formation:  Lorraine Group, Whetstone Gulf Formation
Location:  Lewis County, New York
Size: Trilobite is over 1 centimeter long
Price: SOLD

Specimen TTNYT802

This is the kind of trilobite that every collector dreams about! It is a beautiful Triarthrus eatoni from the Lorraine Group, Whetstone Gulf Formation of upstate New York. The trilobite was prepared slowly, hoping against hope to expose some soft parts of the trilobite. Although only one in hundreds(?) of these trilobites have traces of soft parts preserved, this specimen hit the jackpot! BOTH antennae and two very distinct rows of appendages are exposed - these are VERY EASILY seen in the photos and with the naked eye. There have been very, very few trilobites ever found in the fossil record with this much detail of the delicate soft parts. This is a very collectible example of a trilobite displaying its rarely-seen antennae and appendages. (Specimen was immersed in toluene to heighten contrast in photo.)

Click on Slide Show Thumbnails for Close-Up images
Click here for a close-up  



 
 
©2002-2024 Extinctions, INC. All rights reserved

Terms of Use and Privacy Policy