Tasmaniolimulus
Tasmaniolimulus patersoni is an extinct species of austrolimulid xiphosuran, closely related to living horseshoe crabs. It was found in the Early Triassic Jackey Shale of Tasmania, Australia. Originally considered an indeterminate species of Paleolimulus, it was formally named as a new genus and species in 2019 by Russell Bicknell. Unlike living horseshoe crabs, Tasmaniolimulus is thought to have lived in freshwater.
Research history
In 1989, D. L. Ewington, M. J. Clarke and M. R. Banks described a xiphosuran fossil found Jackey Shale of Tasmania, Australia. They compared this species to another species of extinct xiphosuran, Paleolimulus avitu from North America. They concluded that the species originated from Chhidruan stage of the Late Permian, they concluded that the fossil represented an indeterminate species of Paleolimulus.In 2019, a paper Russel Bicknell re-examined the specimen, using synchrotron radiation X-ray tomography with a monochromatic beam energy of 80 keV to scan the fossil, which is preserved as an internal mold. He determined that the fossil represented a new genus and species, Tasmaniolimulus patersoni, belonging to the xiphosuran family Austrolimulidae. The species name patersoni comes from Professor John Paterson, an Australian paleologist that supported Dr. Bicknell in his scientific career. In 2022, the age of the specimen was revised to the Olenekian age at the beginning of the Triassic.