Rare prehistoric spider fossil discovered in China - and it is so unusual scientists have created a new species in its honour

The spider fossil was discovered in the Daohugou beds of Inner Mongolia




It was found in the same place as the Nephila jurassica fossil from 2011


Whereas the original fossil is female, the new discovery is male

Researchers believe the pair to be similar to modern ogre-faced spiders


They have proposed a new genus called Mongolarachne to describe it

Three years after scientists made the astonishing discovery of a large prehistoric spider fossil in China, the same team have uncovered another.

The original female fossil, found in the Daohugou beds of Inner Mongolia in 2011, was so well preserved experts claimed it was part of the Nephila species.

Yet the latest discovery of a similar-sized male fossil casts serious doubt over this theory because its relative size doesn't fit the Nephila mould.


In fact, the researchers were so baffled by the differences, they have proposed a new genus called Mongolarachne, to describe the creature.

Professor Paul Selden from Kansas University was part of the research team that discovered both fossilised spiders.

Spider fossils are rare because their bodies are soft, yet this pair was found in volcanic deposits and experts believe these deposits may have buried the pair at the bottom of a lake, perfectly preserving them.

Back in 2011, the 165-million-year-old female spider was dubbed Nephila jurassica. The Nephila genus is also known as Golden orb-weavers.

The fossil is roughly the size of the spider's modern-day descendants, with a body one-inch long and more than half an inch wide, and legs that stretch to 2.5 inches.

The females in this genus are the largest web-weaving spiders alive today, with a body length of up to 2 inches and a leg span of 6 inches. Males are relatively small in comparison.

While the male fossil looked similar to the Nephila jurassica, its size and shape suggested otherwise.

Firstly, it wasn't that much smaller than the female, with a 0.65-inch long body, and legs that stretch 2.29 inches.

Its sex appendages, between its jaws and legs, also did not match those seen on modern-day Nephila males.

It was additionally said to have 'spirals of hairlets' that were more feathery than those seen on orb-weavers.

This led Professor Selden and his team to propose a new genus, Mongolarachne of the family Mongolarachnidae, to describe the creatures.

According to findings reported in the journal Naturwissenschaften, Monogolarachne closely resemble modern-day ogre-faced spiders, of the Deinopidae family.

The spider was dug up at a site called Daohugou in Inner Mongolia that is filled with fossilised salamanders, small primitive mammals, insects and water crustaceans.

During the Jurassic era, the fossil bed was part of a lake in a volcanic region.

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