3.9 Article

The earliest record of terrestrial animals in Gondwana: A scorpion from the Famennian (Late Devonian) Witpoort Formation of South Africa

Journal

AFRICAN INVERTEBRATES
Volume 54, Issue 2, Pages 373-379

Publisher

COUNCIL NATAL MUSEUM
DOI: 10.5733/afin.054.0206

Keywords

Scorpiones; Mesoscorpionina; Late Devonian; Famennian; Gondwana; South Africa; Waterloo Farm; chela; high palaeolatitude; new taxa; terrestrialisation

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation of South Africa
  2. Department of Science and Technology of South Africa

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The new genus and species, Gondwanascorpio emzantsiensis, are described in Scorpiones incertae sedis on the basis of fragments from the Famennian (Late Devonian) Waterloo Farm locality near Grahamstown, Eastern Cape, South Africa. This finding adds to the sparse record of Late Devonian scorpion taxa and provides the first evidence of Palaeozoic scorpions from Gondwana. Material includes a complete chela with associated patella as well as a telson with associated metasomal segment V, resembling those of the Mesoscorpionina. This is the first record of a scorpion occurring at high latitudes. Its close resemblance to contemporary taxa from Laurasia and China is consistent with evidence from the type locality for increasingly uniform terrestrial ecosystems by the end of the Devonian, characterised by cosmopolitan plant genera such as the progymnosperm tree Archaeopteris. In part, this may reflect increasing proximity between Laurasia and Gondwana towards the end of the Devonian. These specimens also provide the earliest record of terrestrial animals in Gondwana.

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