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Parioscorpio restoration

Parioscorpio restored as a close relative to eurypterids and chasmataspids

Parioscorpio venator is the oldest-known possible scorpion species that is reported to date and theorised to be capable of leaving its marine habitat and venturing onto land, a behaviour similar to that of present-day horseshoe crabs. Parioscorpio lived around 437 million years ago during the Silurian period.

Image 8031 1e-Parioscorpio-venator

Life restoration as a scorpion

Discovery[]

Andrew Wendruff and colleagues describe two well-preserved specimens of a previously unknown fossil scorpion species discovered in the Waukesha Biota in Wisconsin, USA, which dates from the early Silurian.

This makes the fossils older than Dolichophonus loudonensis, from Scotland, which was previously accepted as the oldest known scorpion species.

Characteristics[]

P. venator shows some primitive characteristics present in other early marine organisms, such as compound eyes, as well as characteristics found in

Image 8031 2e-Parioscorpio-venator

The fossils and their reconstruction

present-day scorpions, such as a tail terminating in a stinger. Both P. venator specimens show details of internal anatomy, including narrow, hourglass-shaped structures that extend along much of the middle part of the body. These structures are very similar to the circulatory and respiratory systems in present-day scorpions, as well as those of modern horseshoe crabs, according to the authors.

No lungs or gills are evident in the P. venator fossils, but their similarity to horseshoe crabs, which can breathe on land, suggests that while the oldest scorpions may not have been fully terrestrial, they may have forayed onto land for extended periods of time.[1][2]

Reference[]

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