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

Accepted version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Abstract

Arthropleura is a genus of giant myriapods that ranged from the early Carboniferous to Early Permian, with some individuals attaining lengths of over 2 metres. While most known fossils of the genus are disarticulated and occur primarily in late Carboniferous (Pennsylvanian) strata, here we report partially articulated Arthropleura remains from the early Carboniferous Stainmore Formation (Serpukhovian; Pendleian) in the Northumberland Basin of northern England. This 76 x 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 biggest 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 other global evidence for Arthropleura, the specimen contributes to a dataset that shows the genus had an equatorially restricted palaeogeographic range, achieved gigantism prior to late Palaeozoic peaks in atmospheric oxygen, and was relatively unaffected by climatic events in the late Carboniferous, prior to its extinction in the early Permian.

Description

Keywords

37 Earth Sciences, 3705 Geology, 14 Life Below Water

Journal Title

Journal of the Geological Society

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

0016-7649
2041-479X

Volume Title

Publisher

Geological Society of London
Sponsorship
NERC (1634018)
NERC (NE/L002507/1)