Even Ancient Trilobites Were Social

Trilobites were fossilized while congregating in line.
(Image credit: Manuel Valerio/Arouca Geopark)

Seeking safety in numbers is an age-old maneuver—at least 465 million years old, it turns out. Ordovician-period fossils discovered in Portugal show groups of trilobites hiding out or molting together—rare clues to the ancient marine arthropods’ social and survival behaviors.

The fossils come from a roofing-slate quarry near the town of Oporto. Small trilobites often appear together in single files that zigzag or wave their way across the rock. It’s as if predator-wary trilobites sought shelter in long, narrow tunnels, say Juan C. Gutiérrez-Marco of the Institute of Economic Geology in Madrid and his colleagues, who analyzed the fossils.

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