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View full screen - View 1 of Lot 13. Horseshoe Crab Trace Fossil With Preserved "Death March".

Horseshoe Crab Trace Fossil With Preserved "Death March"

🍨Late Jurassic Period, Kimmeridgian Stage (approx. 155-150 million years ago), Solnhofen, Germany

Live auction begins on:

July 16, 02:00 PM GMT

Estimate

12,000 - 18,000 USD

Bid

9,000 USD

Lot Details

Description

Horse♈shoe Crab Trace Fossil With Preserved "Death March"

Mesolimulus walchi

Late Jurassic Period, Kimmeridgian Stage (approx. 155-150 million years ago)

Solnhofen, Germany


55½ x 29½ x 1⅛ inches (141 x 74.9 x 2.9 cm). Horseshoe crab measures 6⅝ x 3⅝ inches (16.8 x 9.2 cm). Mortichnial trackway ("Death March") measures 54 inches (137.2 cm). 130 pounds (59 kg).


A fossil mortichnial trackway indisputably made by an extinct horseshoe crab. This interesting trace fossil is in good condition showing the body mold of the crab at the end of its trail. The limestone plate is rigged on the back for both vertical and horizont𒐪al wall hanging.

THE PRESERVED "DEATH MARCH" OF AN ANCIENT 🌃HORSESHOE CRAB


Horseshoe crabs first appeared approximately 445 to 440 million years ago, at the boundary between the Ordovician and Silurian Periods of the Paleozoic Era. Often referred to as "living fossils," present-day Limulus horseshoe crabs look extremely similar to their Mesolimulus ancestors, including the Mesolimulus walchi specimen seen here.


This trace fossil was produced by a horseshoe crab that lived approximately 155 million years ago in the Solnhofen limestone of Bavaria, Germany. Exam💯ples of similar specimens from Solnhofen can be found in most prominent natural history museums and collections around the world. While the outline of the head, abdomen, tail, and opisthosomal spines of this specimen are all extremely well-defined, it is the 4-and-a-hꦫalf-foot trace of this animal's mortichnial trackway, or "death march," that makes this fossil quite a rarity and something that many other collections cannot match.


Mortichnial trackways provide crucial information about theꦬ behavior of animals when they were alive. This is why trace fossils — also known as ichnofossils — are so valuable to researchers, museums, and collectors: whether it is the death marches of horseshoe crabs or the footprints of dinosaurs, they give u♐s important information about ancient animal locomotion that skeletons and bones often cannot provide.


Presumably, this horseshoe crab fell into the oxygen-depleted environmen🃏t of the ancient Solnhofen lagoon and quickly began asphyxiating as itꩵ walked along the muddy and stagnant bottom of this relatively lifeless environment. However, what killed the horseshoe crab is also what helped to preserve it: the anoxic environment of Solnhofen made it an ideal place to preserve fossils, without the deterioration, decay, and predation that hamper fossilization in oxygen-rich environments.

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