Olenoides is an average size trilobite (up to 9 cm long), broadly oval in outline. Its
cephalon is semi-circular. The glabella is parallel-sided, rounded at its front and almost reaches the anterior border. Narrow occular ridges curve backwards from the front of the glabella to the small, outwardly-bowed eyes. The librigenae narrow backward into straight, slender genal spines that reach as far as the third thorax segment. Thorax consists of seven segments that end in needle-like spines.
pygidium) has six axial rings that decrease in size backwards and four or five pairs of rearward pointing marginal spines. Cephalon, thorax and pygidium are of approximately equal length.
Olenoides serratus is one of about twenty species of which the non-calcified parts are known, due to so-called
soft tissue preservation. The
antennae are the most anterior pair of appendages in trilobites. In
O. serratus, these are attached about halfway the immediately adjacent to the
hypostome, and appear from the
dorsal side under the cephalon in front of the side of the glabella. They were flexible, having a tubular shape that became narrower towards anterior and composed of between 40 and 50 segments that are each shorter than wide.
Olenoides serratus is the only known trilobite with
cerci,
uniramous appendages on
ventral side of last
pygidial segment, and these are shaped like the antennas. ==See also==