Fossil claw reveals oldest known spider relative from 500 million years ago

Researchers have identified a 500-million-year-old fossil from Utah as Megachelicerax cousteaui, the earliest known chelicerate and relative of spiders, scorpions and horseshoe crabs. The discovery, detailed in a Nature study, extends the group's evolutionary history by 20 million years to the Cambrian period. A tiny claw uncovered during preparation confirmed its significance.

Rudy Lerosey-Aubril, a research scientist at Harvard University's Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, spotted the claw while preparing the fossil from Utah's Wheeler Formation in the House Range. Collected by amateur fossil hunter Lloyd Gunther and donated to the University of Kansas Biodiversity Institute in 1981, the specimen had sat overlooked for decades. Lerosey-Aubril spent over 50 hours under a microscope to reveal its features, including a head shield with six pairs of feeding and sensory appendages, nine body segments, and plate-like structures resembling horseshoe crab book gills. The animal measured just over 8 centimeters long. The defining chelicera, a pincer-like appendage absent in insects, marked it as the oldest of its kind. Previously, the earliest chelicerates dated to about 480 million years ago from Morocco's Fezouata Biota. Javier Ortega-Hernández, an associate professor and curator at Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology, co-authored the study. He said, 'Megachelicerax shows that chelicera and the division of the body into two functionally specialized regions evolved before the head appendages lost their outer branches and became like the legs of spiders today. It reconciles several competing hypotheses; in a way, everybody was partly right.' Lerosey-Aubril noted, 'This fossil documents the Cambrian origin of chelicerates, and shows that the anatomical blueprint of spiders and horseshoe crabs was already emerging 500 million years ago.' Named Megachelicerax cousteaui after explorer Jacques-Yves Cousteau, the fossil highlights early complexity during the Cambrian Explosion, when arthropods rivaled modern forms despite later ecological delays. The researchers emphasized the value of museum collections for such breakthroughs.

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