1,584 research outputs found
A new identity for the Silurian arthropod Necrogammarus
Restudyof the enigmatic arthropod Necrogammarus salweyi Woodward, hitherto considered to be a crustacean or myriapod, reveals that it is the infracapitulum (fused labrum and palpal coxae) and palp of a large but unspecified pterygoid curypterid
First fossil mesothele spider, from the Carboniferous of France
First fossil mesothele spider, from the Carboniferous of France. Eothele montceauensis n. gen., n. sp., is described from two specimens from the Upper Carboniferous (Stephanian) of Montceau-Ies-Mines,France, as the first fossil and oldest known mesothele spider. In addition to the plesiomorphies characteristic of mesotheles, the holotype of Eothele preserves one mesothele synapomorphy (deep, narrow sternum) and at least one autapomorphy of the genus (biserially dentate chelicerae). The fossil is evidence that both mesotheles and opisthotheles were present in the Carboniferous period
Lower Cretaceous spiders from the Sierra de Montsech, north-east Spain
Four new specimens of spiders (Chelicerata: Araneae), from Lower Cretaceous (Berriasian-Valanginian) lithographic limestones of the Sierra de Montsech, Lérida Province, north-east Spain, are described, as Cretaraneus vilaltae gen. et sp. nov., Macryphantes cowdeni gen. et sp. nov. (two specimens), and Palaeouloborus lacasae gen. et sp. nov. All belong to the infraorder Araneomorphae. Palaeouloborus is the oldest representative of the superfamily Deinopoidea, Cretaraneus is referred to the superfamily Araneoidea, and Macryphantes is
the oldest record of the superfamily Araneoidea, family Tetragnathidae (metine-tetragnathine-nephiline group). All three spiders were web weavers; Macryphantes and Palaeouloborus wove orb webs, and may have used a wrap attack to prey on the abundant contemporaneous insect life preserved in the Montsech deposit
First British Mesozoic spider, from Cretaceous amber of the Isle of Wight, southern England
Cretamygale chasei, a new genus and species of spider, is described from a single specimen preserved in amber of early Barremian age from the Isle of Wight. This is the oldest (and second Cretaceous) amber spider to be described, and the first record of a Mesozoic spider from Britain. It belongs to the group Bipectina of the infraorder Mygalomorphae, and is tentatively referred to the family Nemesiidae. It is the oldest bipectinate, extending the record by around 90 myr, the only known fossil nemesiid, and the second oldest fossil mygalomorph
Eocene spiders from the Isle of Wight with preserved respiratory structures
A new fossil spider, Vectaraneus yulei gen. et sp. nov., from the Eocene Bembridge Marls Insect Bed of the
Isle of Wight, shows internal anatomy, including book lungs and tracheae, preserved by calcium carbonate
replacement. The wide, medially positioned, tracheal spiracle and large tracheae which enter the prosoma are
adaptations for an amphibious mode of life. The spider is placed in Cybaeidae Simon, 1898, Argyronetinae Menge,
1869, a subfamily which includes the Recent European Water Spider, Argyroneta aquatica (Clerck, 1757). The only
previously described Bembridge Marls spider, Eoatypus woodwardii McCook, 1888, is redescribed; it is unrelated to
Vectaraneus. The holotype of Argyroneta antiqua Von Heyden (1859) is redescribed; it is not an Argyroneta.
Specimens referred to A. antiqua by Bertkau (1878) probably belong in Argyronetinae Menge, 1869, and this
subfamily is emended herein
Geometric Morphometrics of Gary Dart Points from the Davy Crockett National Forest
Three-dimensional scans of Gary dart points recovered from the Davy Crockett National Forest are employed in tests of basal morphology by site, size (allometry), and asymmetry. Variability in basal morphology for Gary points from sites on the Davy Crockett National Forest is presented and compared to specimens from the published type books. The hypothesis that Gary basal morphology differs between sites containing Woodland-era sand temped ceramics and those where no sand tempered ceramics were recovered is then tested and the results discussed
A trigonotarbid arachnid from the early Devonian of Tredomen, Wales
A new trigonotarbid (Arachnida: Trigonotarbida) Arianrhoda bennetti gen. et sp. nov. is described from the
Lower Devonian (Lochkovian) of a quarry near Tredomen, Powys, mid Wales, UK. This relatively complete specimen
is the first record of a pre-Carboniferous arachnid from Wales, one of only a handful of early Devonian arachnids, and
the second oldest trigonotarbid recorded. Based on the rounded prosomal dorsal shield and the relatively narrow,
elongate opisthosoma we refer this new fossil to the family Anthracosironidae. A distinct flange-like ornament on the
leg 4 tibia in the new fossil is unique among trigonotarbids and is the primary autapomorphy for the new genus
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