- Hibbertopterus
Taxobox
name = "Hibbertopterus"
fossil_range = LatePermian
regnum =Animal ia
phylum =Arthropod a
subphylum =Chelicerata
classis =Eurypterid a
genus = "Hibbertopterus""Hibbertopterus" is a genus of giant
sea scorpion s (classEurypterida ) extinct 250 million years ago, thought to have inhabited theswamps ofScotland ."Hibbertopterus" is believed to have been one of the first water animals to exhibit terrestrial
locomotion , as tracks indicating a dragging movement have been found inWest Lothian , Scotland [cite journal|url=http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v438/n7068/pdf/438576a.pdf|journal=Nature|volume=438|pages=576|author=Whyte, M A|title=Palaeoecology: A gigantic fossil arthropod trackway] . The track found was roughly sixmetre s long and a metre wide, suggesting the size of the scorpion to be six feet in length.The specimen itself is the base of overlying and infilling
sandstone and thus shows the tracks in negative relief: a groove appears as a ridge.Writing in Nature, palaeontologist Martin A. Whyte of the
University of Sheffield presents evidence that the animal that made the tracks was about 1.6 m long and 1 m wide, thus comparable in size with the largest known Hibbertopteroid body fossils.The trackway itself is in a non-marine sequence. It is 6m long, about a meter wide and consists of "sinuous, paired belts of appendage prints flanking a sub-central groove". Whyte showed that the animal making the tracks was moving extremely slowly.
References
External links
* [http://www.livescience.com/animalworld/051130_giant_scorpion.html Live science]
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