
Phys.org has a story about a very strange and rare fossil. It’s sort of the turducken of the fossil world. In this case, researchers described a fossil, which dates to the Jurassic Period about 180 million years ago, of a belemnite eating a crustacean, which was in turn being eaten by a shark. The description is in a paper which was published in the Swiss Journal of Palaeontology.
A team of researchers has discovered a fossil they are describing as a leftover fall event in which one creature was in the process of eating another creature that was not consumed. In their paper published in the Swiss Journal of Palaeontology, the group describes the fossilized find and what it taught them about behavior between ancient cephalopods and vertebrate predators.
Over the course of many years, archeologists have unearthed fossils of creatures that were interacting at the time of their death—one such type of interaction involves a predator capturing prey. Prior researchers have called fossils of creatures just prior to being consumed “pabulites” (Latin for “leftovers.”) In this new effort, the researchers studied an ancient crustacean pabulite that was about to be consumed by an ancient squid-like creature called a belemnite.
The combined fossils were discovered by an amateur collector who found them in a quarry in Germany. Recently, one of the members of the research team happened across the collection and arranged for the State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart to purchase the specimens. Soon thereafter, a research team was assembled and the group began studying the find.
Both of the specimens were still embedded in the fossilized sediment—one was a belemnite, the other a crustacean of the genus Proeryon—it had a body reminiscent of a lobster with long, thin claws. The belemnite was in excellent condition, allowing the researchers to see that a large portion of its upper soft body had been torn away by a predator. The Proeryon, on the other hand, was in poor condition, and the researchers believe that it was in the process of molting. Both fossils were dated to approximately 180 million years ago.
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