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Fig. 1.—Restoration of under side of a trilobite (Triarthrus becki), the trunk limbs bearing small triangular respiratory lobes or gills.—After Beecher.
The Merostomata.
The Trilobita.
Fig. 2.—Restored section of Calymene: C, carapace; en, endopodite; en′, exopodite; with the gills on the epipodal or respiratory part of the appendage.—After Walcott.
The limbs in trilobites, as well as the abdominal ones of merostomes, and all those of Crustacea, except the first antennæ, are biramose, consisting of an outer (exopodite) and an inner division (endopodite). In this respect the terrestrial air-breathing tracheate forms, Arachnida, Myriopoda, and Insecta, differ from the branchiate forms, as their legs are single or undivided, being adapted for supporting the body during locomotion upon the solid earth. It is to be observed that when, as in Limulus, the body is supported by cephalic ambulatory limbs, they are single, while the abdominal limbs, used as they are in swimming, are biramose, much as in Crustacea.