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Necrogammarus information


Necrogammarus
Temporal range: Late Silurian, 422.9–418.7 Ma
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Illustration of In.43786, the holotype (and only known) specimen of N. salweyi.
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Subphylum: Chelicerata
Order: Eurypterida
Superfamily: Pterygotioidea
Family: Pterygotidae
Genus: Necrogammarus
Woodward, 1870
Species:
N. salweyi
Binomial name
Necrogammarus salweyi
Woodward, 1870

Necrogammarus salweyi is the binomial name applied to an arthropod fossil discovered in Herefordshire, England. The fossil represents a fragmentary section of the underside and an appendage of a pterygotid eurypterid, a group of large and predatory aquatic arthropods that lived from the late Silurian to the late Devonian. The Necrogammarus fossil is Late Silurian in age and its generic name means "dead lobster", deriving from Ancient Greek νεκρός (nekrós, “dead body”) and Latin gammarus ("lobster").

Historically classified as either a millipede or a crustacean (hence the name) and once considered to potentially represent the oldest myriapod in the fossil record, Necrogammarus was first revealed to represent a fragmentary section of a large pterygotid eurypterid in 1986 by the researcher Paul Selden. As two large pterygotids are already known from the same locality and same timespan as Necrogammarus, Erettopterus and Pterygotus, it is possible that the Necrogammarus remains, in reality, belong to one of these genera. As both genera are only diagnosed and differentiated from each other by features in body parts absent in the Necrogammarus fossil, such as the chelicerae (frontal appendages) and coxae (leg segments), it is impossible to assign Necrogammarus to either of them for the time being.

Pterygotids are differentiated from other eurypterids by their flattened telsons (the most posterior segment of the body) and their modified chelicerae (frontal appendages), ending in well-developed chelae (claws). Regardless of its potential identity as either Pterygotus or Erettopterus, these features are likely to have been present in Necrogammarus as well, as all other members of the family possess them.

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Necrogammarus

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same locality and same timespan as Necrogammarus, Erettopterus and Pterygotus, it is possible that the Necrogammarus remains, in reality, belong to one...

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Pterygotidae

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key diagnostic features in the Necrogammarus remains makes assignment to either impossible, and therefore, Necrogammarus is considered an unspecified pterygotid...

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List of eurypterid genera

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Silurian - Devonian  England  Norway  Russia  Scotland  United States Necrogammarus Woodward 1870 Valid Silurian  England Onychopterella Størmer 1951 Valid...

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Timeline of eurypterid research

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Henry Huxley describe the fossil specimens that will later be named Necrogammarus salweyi, believing them to represent some sort of crustacean. 1860 Edouard...

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Subcapitulum

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coxal regions of the pedipalp are enlarged. Another example would be Necrogammarus, an extinct genus of chelicerate eurypterid only known by its subcapitulum...

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