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The Earth Story

@earthstory / earthstory.tumblr.com

This is the blog homepage of the Facebook group "The Earth Story" (Click here to visit our Facebook group). “The Earth Story” are group of volunteers with backgrounds throughout the Earth Sciences. We cover all Earth sciences - oceanography, climatology, geology, geophysics and much, much more. Our articles combine the latest research, stunning photography, and basic knowledge of geosciences, and are written for everyone!
We hope you find us to be a unique home for learning about the Earth sciences, and we hope you enjoy!
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A Final Journey Set In Stone Something unfortunate happened to a horseshoe crab some 150 million years ago. A harsh storm washed it into a toxic lagoon, where it scrambled around and eventually died. What it left behind was remarkable - a perfectly fossilized story of its final, brief journey, capturing the longest, complete death track ever found. The horseshoe crab, Mesolimulus walchi, was discovered in Solnhofen, Germany, along with many other beautifully fossilized animals. The soft carbonate mud preserved insects, sea jellies, and dinosaurs with great detail. M. walchi was likely a juvenile at the time of its death, measuring 12.7cm long by 6.9cm wide. The toxic lagoon that it was dropped into was highly salty and anoxic (no oxygen). According to Dean Lomax of the Doncaster Museum & Art Gallery in the U.K. and Christopher Racay of the Wyoming Dinosaur Center, the disturbed surface at the beginning of its trail shows that the horseshoe crab sank to the bottom of the lagoon on its back and struggled to turn upright. It then began its mortichnia, meaning death track or last walk, meandering and making a few turns before becoming distressed. It then began to asphyxiate, leaving behind less uniform, deeper and more erratic imprints as it tried to escape. At the end of the 9.7 meter fossilized trail we find the complete specimen of the crab. Lomax and Racay dismiss the hypothesis that it was dropped in the lagoon by a flying predator, such as a pterosaur, due to the lack of any predation marks. Lomax writes in the journal Ichnos, “Trackways and trace makers preserved together in the fossil record are rare and such specimens allow unique insights into behavior and ecology.” So our little arthropod friend did not die in vain: its story was set in stone and survived millions of years as one of the most amazing specimens of its kind. ~ SW For more info: http://www.sci-news.com/paleontology/article00554.html (Original paywalled article) http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/10420940.2012.702704#preview Photo credit: Ghedoghedo http://bit.ly/1udDEqt

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