Welcome Guest Thursday, 29 July 2010
Rate Article Collapse
My Account Collapse
Username :
Password :
Register 
SNW Poll Collapse
Do You Believe In The Supernatural?

Definitely [68.42%]
Skeptical [21.05%]
No [10.53%]

Total : 19 votes
Log in to vote
Online Users Collapse
Free Newsletter! Collapse
Forum Statistics Collapse
Sponsors Collapse
A-Z Glossary Collapse
File Archives Collapse
Spider web confirmed as 'oldest' Collapse
Sunday, 1 November 2009

Spider webs encased in amber which were discovered on an East Sussex beach have been confirmed by scientists as being the world's oldest on record. The amber, which was found in Bexhill by fossil hunter Jamie Hiscocks and his brother Jonathan, dates back 140 million years to the Cretaceous period. Professor Martin Brasier said they were the earliest webs to be incorporated into the fossil record. He has published his findings in the Journal of the Geological Society.

Professor Brasier, who is a palaeobiologist at the University of Oxford, said: "This amber is very rare. It comes from the very base of the Cretaceous, which makes it one of the oldest ambers anywhere to have inclusions in it." He added: "These spiders are distinctive and leave little sticky droplets along the spider web threads to trap prey. "We actually have the sticky droplets preserved within the amber. These turn out to be the earliest webs that have ever been incorporated in the fossil record to our knowledge."

To view the rest of this article, please visit the source

Source

Ads by Google  
Site Donations Collapse
© 2003-2010 TheSupernaturalWorld.com, All Rights Reserved. Back To Top
Site works best with Internet Explorer 7.x and above. Privacy  |  Disclaimer