Nevadia is an extinct genus of redlichiid trilobites, with species of average size (about 3.5 centimetres or 1.4 inches long). It lived during the Atdabanian stage, which lasted from 530 to 524 million years ago, in what are today Western Canada, the Western United States, and Mexico.

Nevadia
Temporal range: Atdabanian 524–521 Ma
Nevadia sp.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain:Eukaryota
Kingdom:Animalia
Phylum:Arthropoda
Class:Trilobita
Order:Redlichiida
Suborder:Olenellina
Superfamily:Nevadioidea
Family:Nevadiidae
Genus:Nevadia
Walcott, 1910
Species
  • N. weeksi Walcott, 1910 (Type)
  • N. addyensis Okulitch, 1951
  • N. faceta (Fritz, 1972)
  • N. fritzi Lieberman, 2001
  • N. gracile (Walcott, 1910)
  • N. ovalis McMenamin, 1987
  • N. parvoconica Fritz, 1992
  • N. saupeae Gapp, 2011

Etymology

Nevadia is named for the US State of Nevada, where the first specimens of this genus where found. N. fritzi in named in honor of W.H. Fritz, a paleontologist who worked on olenelloid trilobites.

Description

The body of Nevadia is very flat dorso-ventrally. The general outline of its thin, lightly calcified exoskeleton is inverted wide drop-shaped. The front is rounded, widest at the back of the headshield (or cephalon), and tapering from there to an eventually rounded termination. The central area of the cephalon (or glabella) is distinctly tapered forward, sides slightly concave, but not wedging out in the frontal half and with a narrow rounded front. The glabella and the frontal margin do not touch (in jargon: the preglabellar field is present). Cephalic margin clearly less wide as the most frontal thoracal segment. The thorax has 27 segments. The segments look a bit degenerated behind the 15th to 18th (or an opisthothorax can be distinguished). The pleural spines are long and sickle-shaped. The tailshield (or pygidium) is very small and subquadrate in shape.[1]

Distribution

Nevadia weeksi from the Poleta Formation

Taxonomic

Nevadia predates Nevadella and according to cladistic analysis includes its direct ancestor.

Species previously assigned to Nevadia

Habitat

Nevadia species were probably marine bottom dwellers, like all Olenellina.

References