HomeScience130-year-old fossil mistaken for caterpillar turns out to be first land-living lobopodian

130-year-old fossil mistaken for caterpillar turns out to be first land-living lobopodian

The fossil, Palaeocampa anthrax, was first described in 1865. Since then, it shifted labels—from worm to millipede to marine creature.

July 23, 2025 / 18:06 IST
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Neotype of Palaeocampa anthrax from the Mazon Creek Lagerstätte and rediscovered in the Invertebrate Paleontology collection of the MCZ. (Image: Richard J. Knecht)
Neotype of Palaeocampa anthrax from the Mazon Creek Lagerstätte and rediscovered in the Invertebrate Paleontology collection of the MCZ. (Image: Richard J. Knecht)

At first glance, it looked like a caterpillar. For over a century, that’s how it stayed—quietly tucked away in a drawer at Harvard’s Museum of Comparative Zoology. But a closer look has now revealed its true identity: the earliest-known nonmarine lobopodian and a surprising clue to life’s ancient journey on land.

From Caterpillar to Evolutionary Link

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The fossil, Palaeocampa anthrax, was first described in 1865. Since then, it shifted labels—from worm to millipede to marine creature. But it was only recently that a former Harvard student, Richard Knecht, saw something different. He found legs on every segment, ruling out earlier guesses. That clue pointed straight to lobopodians—extinct soft-bodied creatures tied to modern arthropods.

These ancient animals are often found in Cambrian marine rocks. Famous ones like Hallucigenia and Aysheaia were all from the sea. But Palaeocampa told a different story. It lived in freshwater swamps, far from the ocean. It is also younger than other known lobopodians, yet comes from an earlier time.