“The Enfield Horror” by John Meszaros (website, Deviantart, Blogspot).

seen from United Kingdom
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seen from Netherlands

seen from Poland
seen from Poland

seen from Egypt
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seen from United Kingdom

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seen from United States

seen from Mexico
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seen from Mexico

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“The Enfield Horror” by John Meszaros (website, Deviantart, Blogspot).
“Crawfordsville Monster” by John Meszaros.
Trilobite Phacops rana by *NocturnalSea
The "classic trilobite" Phacops rana -- the state fossil of Pennsylvania.
Surrounding this swarm are other common fossils of Pennsylvania:
the gastropods Worthenia and Strobeus,
the brachiopod Acrospirifer
the bivalve Leiopteria.
and a couple of speculative sea slugs.
Many of the colors and designs of this piece were based on New England tide pools.
The Leiopteria, for example, are colored and clumped like Mytilis edulis, the common blue mussel of the Northern Atlantic.
Additionally, the pink-gray background is a crustose coralline algae similar to the "bubble gum crust" Phymatolithon lenormandii which is common on intertidal rocks in New England. (Coralline algae possess a "skeleton" of calcium carbonate.)
The dark purple seaweed along the edge is meant to resemble Chondrus crispus, a red algae that possess a blue iridescence when underwater.
The small yellow creatures in the bottom left are trilobite larvae called protaspids. Little more than head-shields at this point, the protaspids will grow new body segments with each molt.