Earth's Oldest Large Aquatic Predator Was A Terrifying 'Sea Scorpion'

“It was obviously a very aggressive animal. It was a big angry bug."

"Jumbo shrimp" doesn't do it justice.

Researchers at Yale and the University of Iowa have discovered a fossil of Earth's oldest large aquatic predator, a human-sized "giant sea scorpion" (albeit without the stinger-tipped tail). Named "Pentecopterus" in honor of the penteconter, an ancient Greek warship, the 467-million-year-old fossil predates the dinosaurs by a couple hundred million years.

Patrick Lynch/Yale University

A study announcing the finding, published Tuesday in the journal BMC Evolutionary Biology, says that the nearly 6-foot-long Pentecopterus boasted a streamlined body, capped with a long head shield. A series of large limbs underneath helped it trap prey, likely soft, worm-like creatures based on the shape of its jaw, reports Newsweek.

As an "eurypterid" arthropod, Pentecopterus is a distant relative to a number of modern animals, including ticks, spiders and lobsters.

“This is the first real big predator. I wouldn’t have wanted to be swimming with it," James Lamsdell, a postdoctoral associate at Yale and the lead author of the study, told The Guardian. "There’s something about bugs. When they’re a certain size they shouldn’t be allowed to get bigger."

In an email to The Huffington Post, Lamsdell explained that, while animals such as the Anomalocaris are indeed older and could grow to a large size (though were generally about meter long), unlike Pentecopterus, it "was not capable of eating other large organisms or animals with hard parts." Pentecopterus, in contrast, was much more predatory.

“It was obviously a very aggressive animal,” Lamsdell added. “It was a big angry bug."

Scientists found the remarkably well-preserved fossil of the new species in a meteorite crater in northeastern Iowa in 2010. Subsequent research on the fossil "shows that eurypterids evolved some 10 million years earlier than we thought," Lamsdell said in a Yale press release, "and the relationship of the new animal to other eurypterids shows that they must have been very diverse during this early time of their evolution, even though they are very rare in the fossil record."

This story has been updated with comments from Dr. Lamsdell.

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