Fig. 20.—Ogygia Guettardi. Natural size.
The class of Crustaceans, of which the lobster, shrimp, and the crab of our days are the representatives, was that which predominated in this epoch of animal life. Their forms were most singular, and different from those of all existing Crustaceans. They consisted mainly of the Trilobites, a family which became entirely extinct at the close of the Carboniferous epoch, but in whose nicely-jointed shell the armourer of the middle ages might have found all his contrivances anticipated, with not a few besides which he has failed to discover. The head presents, in general, the form of an oval buckler; the body is composed of a series of articulations, or rings, as represented in [Fig. 20]; the anterior portion carrying the eyes, which in some are reticulated, like those of many insects ([Figs. 18] and [19]); the mouth was placed forward and beneath the head. Many of these Crustaceans could roll themselves into balls, like the wood-louse ([Figs. 23] and [25]). They swam on their backs.
Fig. 21.—Lituites cornu-arietis. One-third natural size.
Fig. 22.—Hemicosmites pyriformis. One-third natural size.
During the middle and later Silurian ages, whole rocks were formed almost exclusively of their remains; during the Devonian period they seem to have gradually died out, almost disappearing in the Carboniferous age, and being only represented by one doubtful species in the Permian rocks of North America. The Trilobites are unique as a family, marking with certainty the rocks in which they occur; “and yet,” says Hugh Miller, “how admirably do they exhibit the articulated type of being, and illustrate that unity of design which pervades all Nature, amid its endless diversity!” Among other beings which have left their traces in the Silurian strata is Nereites Cambriensis, a species of annelide, whose articulations are very distinctly marked in the ancient rocks.