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The Official Tag for Triassic Madness is “#Triassic March Madness”! Be sure to look there for posts!
Vaderlimulus tricki, a horseshoe crab from the Early Triassic of Idaho, USA (~251-247 mya). Named for its resemblance to the shape of Darth Vader’s helmet, it’s the earliest known Mesozoic horseshoe crab from North America and was closely related to another oddly-shaped form from Australia.
It was much smaller than its modern relatives, only about 10cm long (4″), and probably lived in a brackish estuary environment where seawater and freshwater met.
Time and Place: 251 to 247 million years ago, the Olenekian of the Early Triassic.
Vaderlimulus is only known from Idaho.
Physical Description: Vaderlimulus was similar in many respects to modern horseshoe crabs. They call them “living fossils” for a reason. The entire body (around 47 mm long not including the telson, which would have more than doubled total length) was protected by a hard carapace, with tiny eyes at the top of this. The legs were present on the underside, with a long, stiff telson projecting posteriorly. The most noteworthy feature of Vaderlimulus is the fact that the lateral spines of its carapace are highly splayed laterally and strongly curved backwards. Modern horseshoe crabs also have these spines, but they’re closely appressed to the body, giving the entire carapace a rounded appearance. You can probably guess why Vaderlimulus bears the name it does
Diet: Vaderlimulus presumably had a similar diet to modern horseshoe crabs, consisting of smaller seafloor invertebrates such as worms and shellfish. And sometimes algae.
Behavior: Presumably, Vaderlimulus had similar behavior to modern horseshoe crabs, feeding on the muddy bottom of shallow waters. Based on its close relatives such as Austrolimulus, Vaderlimulus may have even lived in freshwater. Whether it therefore underwent the same mass spawning as modern marine horseshoe crabs is unknown.
Ecosystem: The geological formation Vaderlimulus comes from is not good at preserving body fossils, but it is rich in trace fossils. Feeding traces and burrows of worms, resting traces of bivalves, and impressions left by fish in the sediment are known, as are impressions of cycads and bennettitales. At least one ammonite has also been preserved. These indicate that the environment was likely a coastal area.
Other: Vaderlimulus is one of the earliest records of the Dark Side in prehistory.
~ By Henry Thomas
Sources Under the Cut
Lerner, A.J., Lucas, S.G., Martin, L. (2017). “First fossil horseshoe crab (Xiphosurida) from the Triassic of North America”. Neues Jahrbuch für Geologie und Paläontologie Abhandlugen 286 (3): 289-302.
Lockley, M., Lucas, S.G., Jenks, J.F., Lerner, A.J., Runions, T., Burton, J. (2018). “A Trace Fossil Assemblage From the Thaynes Group (Triassic), Idaho”. Fossil Record 6: New Mexico Museum of Nautral History and Science Bulletin 79: 429-440.
Click on the above links to refresh your memory about these animals! And feel free to use this post to debate and argue on what people should vote for!
The Official Tag for Triassic Madness is “#Triassic March Madness”! Be sure to look there for posts!
Click on the above links to refresh your memory about these animals! And feel free to use this post to debate and argue on what people should vote for!
The Official Tag for Triassic Madness is “#Triassic March Madness”! Be sure to look there for posts!