March 30, 2016 by Bob Yirka
(Phys.org)—A team of researchers from the U.S. ,
Germany and the U.K. has used
modern technology to reveal the true nature of an ancient arachnid. In their
paper published in Proceedings of the Royal Society B the team
describes the ancient creature as "almost a spider."
Back in the 80's a team of researchers discovered a host of fossils in
a part of what is now eastern France, but at least one of them was only partly
visible because the rest of its body was encased in ironstone. Because
attempting to remove the dense opaque stoneware would have destroyed the fossil, researchers simply put it in a drawer
and waited for technology to develop that would allow for examining the fossil
while still inside the stone. In this new effort, the researchers have used
technology similar to medical CT scans to allow for creating 3D imagery of the
fossil and in so doing have added another piece to the puzzle of how spiders
evolved.
The fossil, named Idmonarachne
brasieri was dated to approximately 305 million years ago, putting it
before the dinosaurs, and it resembles modern spiders in many ways, but is
missing one critical part: an organ for spinning silk. The fossil also did not
have a tail-like appendage, which has been found on other arachnids of nearly
the same time period, which suggested that it was a unique species, one that is
believed to have gone extinct as its cousins continued to evolve into modern
spiders. Because of its age and body structure, the specimen is helping
scientists learn more about the manner in which spiders evolved. They believe it is one of
the closet relatives without actually being a true spider. The 1.5cm arachnid
was also found to have impressive jaws, which further helped prove it was a
unique species.
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