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Fossils from the Fezouata Shale. From left to right, a non-mineralized arthropod (Marrellomorpha), a palaeoscolecid worm and a trilobites. Image Credit Emmanuel Martin. |
Discoveries at a major new fossil site in Morocco suggest giant arthropods – relatives of modern creatures including shrimps, insects and spiders – dominated the seas 470 million years ago.
Early evidence from the site at Taichoute, once undersea but now a desert, records numerous large “free-swimming” arthropods.
More research is needed to analyze these fragments, but based on previously described specimens, the giant arthropods could be up to 2m long.
An international research team says the site and its fossil record are very different from other previously described and studied Fezouata Shale sites from 80km away.
They say Taichoute (considered part of the wider “Fezouata Biota”) opens new avenues for paleontological and ecological research.