Hallucigenia
Everything about Hallucigenia sparsa: the bizarre 508-million-year-old Cambrian lobopodian from the Burgess Shale, reconstructed upside-down and backwards for forty years and now recognised as an ancient cousin of velvet worms.
All articles tagged with "Burgess-Shale"
Everything about Hallucigenia sparsa: the bizarre 508-million-year-old Cambrian lobopodian from the Burgess Shale, reconstructed upside-down and backwards for forty years and now recognised as an ancient cousin of velvet worms.
Everything about Anomalocaris canadensis: the 515-million-year-old Cambrian apex predator from the Burgess Shale, misclassified as three separate animals for 99 years, and armed with 16,000-lens compound eyes and a radial-toothed circular mouth.
Everything about Opabinia regalis: the five-eyed, clawed-proboscis Cambrian oddity from the Burgess Shale whose 1975 reconstruction was so strange that delegates at the Paleontological Association meeting laughed out loud.