• Largest arthropod in Earth history

    From Pandora@21:1/5 to All on Wed Dec 22 15:39:35 2021
    Now, that's a bug!

    The largest arthropod in Earth history: insights from newly discovered Arthropleura remains (Serpukhovian Stainmore Formation,
    Northumberland, England)

    Abstract

    Arthropleura is a genus of giant myriapods that ranged from the early Carboniferous to Early Permian, with some individuals attaining
    lengths >2 m. Although most of the known fossils of the genus are disarticulated and occur primarily in late Carboniferous
    (Pennsylvanian) strata, we report here partially articulated
    Arthropleura remains from the early Carboniferous Stainmore Formation (Serpukhovian; Pendleian) in the Northumberland Basin of northern
    England. This 76 × 36 cm specimen represents part of an exuvium and is
    notable because only two comparably articulated giant Arthropleura
    fossils are previously known. It represents one of the largest known
    arthropod fossils and the largest arthropleurid recovered to date, the
    earliest (Mississippian) body fossil evidence for gigantism in
    Arthropleura, and the first instance of a giant arthropleurid body
    fossil within the same regional sedimentary succession as the large
    arthropod trackway Diplichnites cuithensis. The remains represent
    12–14 anterior Arthropleura tergites in the form of a partially
    sand-filled dorsal exoskeleton. The original organism is estimated to
    have been 55 cm in width and up to 2.63 m in length, weighing c. 50
    kg. The specimen is preserved partially in three dimensions within
    fine sandstone and has been moderately deformed by synsedimentary
    tectonics. Despite imperfect preservation, the specimen corroborates
    the hypothesis that Arthropleura had a tough, sclerotized exoskeleton. Sedimentological evidence for a lower delta plain depositional
    environment supports the contention that Arthropleura preferentially
    occupied open woody habitats, rather than swampy environments, and
    that it shared such habitats with tetrapods. When viewed in the
    context of all the other global evidence for Arthropleura, the
    specimen contributes to a dataset that shows the genus had an
    equatorially restricted palaeogeographical range, achieved gigantism
    prior to late Paleozoic peaks in atmospheric oxygen, and was
    relatively unaffected by climatic events in the late Carboniferous,
    prior to its extinction in the early Permian.

    Open access: https://jgs.lyellcollection.org/content/early/2021/11/19/jgs2021-115

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From John Harshman@21:1/5 to Pandora on Wed Dec 22 08:05:30 2021
    On 12/22/21 6:39 AM, Pandora wrote:
    Now, that's a bug!

    The largest arthropod in Earth history: insights from newly discovered Arthropleura remains (Serpukhovian Stainmore Formation,
    Northumberland, England)

    Abstract

    Arthropleura is a genus of giant myriapods that ranged from the early Carboniferous to Early Permian, with some individuals attaining
    lengths >2 m. Although most of the known fossils of the genus are disarticulated and occur primarily in late Carboniferous
    (Pennsylvanian) strata, we report here partially articulated
    Arthropleura remains from the early Carboniferous Stainmore Formation (Serpukhovian; Pendleian) in the Northumberland Basin of northern
    England. This 76 × 36 cm specimen represents part of an exuvium and is notable because only two comparably articulated giant Arthropleura
    fossils are previously known. It represents one of the largest known arthropod fossils and the largest arthropleurid recovered to date, the earliest (Mississippian) body fossil evidence for gigantism in
    Arthropleura, and the first instance of a giant arthropleurid body
    fossil within the same regional sedimentary succession as the large
    arthropod trackway Diplichnites cuithensis. The remains represent
    12–14 anterior Arthropleura tergites in the form of a partially
    sand-filled dorsal exoskeleton. The original organism is estimated to
    have been 55 cm in width and up to 2.63 m in length, weighing c. 50
    kg. The specimen is preserved partially in three dimensions within
    fine sandstone and has been moderately deformed by synsedimentary
    tectonics. Despite imperfect preservation, the specimen corroborates
    the hypothesis that Arthropleura had a tough, sclerotized exoskeleton. Sedimentological evidence for a lower delta plain depositional
    environment supports the contention that Arthropleura preferentially
    occupied open woody habitats, rather than swampy environments, and
    that it shared such habitats with tetrapods. When viewed in the
    context of all the other global evidence for Arthropleura, the
    specimen contributes to a dataset that shows the genus had an
    equatorially restricted palaeogeographical range, achieved gigantism
    prior to late Paleozoic peaks in atmospheric oxygen, and was
    relatively unaffected by climatic events in the late Carboniferous,
    prior to its extinction in the early Permian.

    Open access: https://jgs.lyellcollection.org/content/early/2021/11/19/jgs2021-115

    Cool. There used to be a life-size Arthropleura model next to a quite
    complete fossil specimen on display at the California Academy of Science
    in San Francisco. Haven't been in a few years so I don't know if it's
    still there. Quite a bug, for sure.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Daud Deden@21:1/5 to Pandora on Wed Dec 22 23:36:09 2021
    On Wednesday, December 22, 2021 at 9:39:36 AM UTC-5, Pandora wrote:
    Now, that's a bug!

    The largest arthropod in Earth history: insights from newly discovered Arthropleura remains (Serpukhovian Stainmore Formation,
    Northumberland, England)

    Abstract

    Arthropleura is a genus of giant myriapods that ranged from the early Carboniferous to Early Permian, with some individuals attaining
    lengths >2 m. Although most of the known fossils of the genus are disarticulated and occur primarily in late Carboniferous
    (Pennsylvanian) strata, we report here partially articulated
    Arthropleura remains from the early Carboniferous Stainmore Formation (Serpukhovian; Pendleian) in the Northumberland Basin of northern
    England. This 76 × 36 cm specimen represents part of an exuvium and is notable because only two comparably articulated giant Arthropleura
    fossils are previously known. It represents one of the largest known arthropod fossils and the largest arthropleurid recovered to date, the earliest (Mississippian) body fossil evidence for gigantism in
    Arthropleura, and the first instance of a giant arthropleurid body
    fossil within the same regional sedimentary succession as the large arthropod trackway Diplichnites cuithensis. The remains represent
    12–14 anterior Arthropleura tergites in the form of a partially sand-filled dorsal exoskeleton. The original organism is estimated to
    have been 55 cm in width and up to 2.63 m in length, weighing c. 50
    kg. The specimen is preserved partially in three dimensions within
    fine sandstone and has been moderately deformed by synsedimentary
    tectonics. Despite imperfect preservation, the specimen corroborates
    the hypothesis that Arthropleura had a tough, sclerotized exoskeleton. Sedimentological evidence for a lower delta plain depositional
    environment supports the contention that Arthropleura preferentially occupied open woody habitats, rather than swampy environments, and
    that it shared such habitats with tetrapods. When viewed in the
    context of all the other global evidence for Arthropleura, the
    specimen contributes to a dataset that shows the genus had an
    equatorially restricted palaeogeographical range, achieved gigantism
    prior to late Paleozoic peaks in atmospheric oxygen, and was
    relatively unaffected by climatic events in the late Carboniferous,
    prior to its extinction in the early Permian.

    Open access: https://jgs.lyellcollection.org/content/early/2021/11/19/jgs2021-115

    7'+, 50kg? Monster millipede.

    I was reading that lemurs eat millipedes to treat helmenth pinworms infections. Millipedes are poisonous and centipedes are venomous iirc.
    I was wondering the length of a blue whale or brontasaurus tapeworm.


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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From erik simpson@21:1/5 to daud....@gmail.com on Thu Dec 23 09:09:25 2021
    On Wednesday, December 22, 2021 at 11:36:11 PM UTC-8, daud....@gmail.com wrote:
    On Wednesday, December 22, 2021 at 9:39:36 AM UTC-5, Pandora wrote:
    Now, that's a bug!

    The largest arthropod in Earth history: insights from newly discovered Arthropleura remains (Serpukhovian Stainmore Formation,
    Northumberland, England)

    Abstract

    Arthropleura is a genus of giant myriapods that ranged from the early Carboniferous to Early Permian, with some individuals attaining
    lengths >2 m. Although most of the known fossils of the genus are disarticulated and occur primarily in late Carboniferous
    (Pennsylvanian) strata, we report here partially articulated
    Arthropleura remains from the early Carboniferous Stainmore Formation (Serpukhovian; Pendleian) in the Northumberland Basin of northern
    England. This 76 × 36 cm specimen represents part of an exuvium and is notable because only two comparably articulated giant Arthropleura
    fossils are previously known. It represents one of the largest known arthropod fossils and the largest arthropleurid recovered to date, the earliest (Mississippian) body fossil evidence for gigantism in Arthropleura, and the first instance of a giant arthropleurid body
    fossil within the same regional sedimentary succession as the large arthropod trackway Diplichnites cuithensis. The remains represent
    12–14 anterior Arthropleura tergites in the form of a partially sand-filled dorsal exoskeleton. The original organism is estimated to
    have been 55 cm in width and up to 2.63 m in length, weighing c. 50
    kg. The specimen is preserved partially in three dimensions within
    fine sandstone and has been moderately deformed by synsedimentary tectonics. Despite imperfect preservation, the specimen corroborates
    the hypothesis that Arthropleura had a tough, sclerotized exoskeleton. Sedimentological evidence for a lower delta plain depositional
    environment supports the contention that Arthropleura preferentially occupied open woody habitats, rather than swampy environments, and
    that it shared such habitats with tetrapods. When viewed in the
    context of all the other global evidence for Arthropleura, the
    specimen contributes to a dataset that shows the genus had an
    equatorially restricted palaeogeographical range, achieved gigantism
    prior to late Paleozoic peaks in atmospheric oxygen, and was
    relatively unaffected by climatic events in the late Carboniferous,
    prior to its extinction in the early Permian.

    Open access: https://jgs.lyellcollection.org/content/early/2021/11/19/jgs2021-115
    7'+, 50kg? Monster millipede.

    I was reading that lemurs eat millipedes to treat helmenth pinworms infections. Millipedes are poisonous and centipedes are venomous iirc.
    I was wondering the length of a blue whale or brontasaurus tapeworm.

    There must have been some monstrous lemurs in the Paleozoic. Sort of like the pre-Cambrian rabbits.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Mark Isaak@21:1/5 to John Harshman on Mon Dec 27 11:05:20 2021
    On 12/22/21 8:05 AM, John Harshman wrote:
    On 12/22/21 6:39 AM, Pandora wrote:
    Now, that's a bug!

    The largest arthropod in Earth history: insights from newly discovered
    Arthropleura remains (Serpukhovian Stainmore Formation,
    Northumberland, England)

    Abstract

    Arthropleura is a genus of giant myriapods that ranged from the early
    Carboniferous to Early Permian, with some individuals attaining
    lengths >2 m. Although most of the known fossils of the genus are
    disarticulated and occur primarily in late Carboniferous
    (Pennsylvanian) strata, we report here partially articulated
    Arthropleura remains from the early Carboniferous Stainmore Formation
    (Serpukhovian; Pendleian) in the Northumberland Basin of northern
    England. This 76 × 36 cm specimen represents part of an exuvium and is
    notable because only two comparably articulated giant Arthropleura
    fossils are previously known. It represents one of the largest known
    arthropod fossils and the largest arthropleurid recovered to date, the
    earliest (Mississippian) body fossil evidence for gigantism in
    Arthropleura, and the first instance of a giant arthropleurid body
    fossil within the same regional sedimentary succession as the large
    arthropod trackway Diplichnites cuithensis. The remains represent
    12–14 anterior Arthropleura tergites in the form of a partially
    sand-filled dorsal exoskeleton. The original organism is estimated to
    have been 55 cm in width and up to 2.63 m in length, weighing c. 50
    kg. The specimen is preserved partially in three dimensions within
    fine sandstone and has been moderately deformed by synsedimentary
    tectonics. Despite imperfect preservation, the specimen corroborates
    the hypothesis that Arthropleura had a tough, sclerotized exoskeleton.
    Sedimentological evidence for a lower delta plain depositional
    environment supports the contention that Arthropleura preferentially
    occupied open woody habitats, rather than swampy environments, and
    that it shared such habitats with tetrapods. When viewed in the
    context of all the other global evidence for Arthropleura, the
    specimen contributes to a dataset that shows the genus had an
    equatorially restricted palaeogeographical range, achieved gigantism
    prior to late Paleozoic peaks in atmospheric oxygen, and was
    relatively unaffected by climatic events in the late Carboniferous,
    prior to its extinction in the early Permian.

    Open access:
    https://jgs.lyellcollection.org/content/early/2021/11/19/jgs2021-115

    Cool. There used to be a life-size Arthropleura model next to a quite complete fossil specimen on display at the California Academy of Science
    in San Francisco. Haven't been in a few years so I don't know if it's
    still there. Quite a bug, for sure.

    It's not a bug; it's a feature.

    --
    Mark Isaak eciton (at) curioustaxonomy (dot) net
    "Omnia disce. Videbis postea nihil esse superfluum."
    - Hugh of St. Victor

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