Skip to content
General News

LARGE FOSSIL SPIDER FOUND IN AUSTRALIA The first fossil from the brush footed trapdoor spider family ever found.

Australlian Museum 4 mins read
Artist's reconstruction of Megamonodontium mccluskyi by Alex Boersma

20 September, 2023, Sydney: A team of Australian scientists led by Australian Museum (AM) and University of New South Wales (UNSW) palaeontologist Dr Matthew McCurry have formally named and described a fossil spider, Megamonodontium mccluskyi, which is between 11 – 16 million years old. The findings on this new genus of spider have now been published in the 2023 Zoological Journal of Linnean Society.

Found at McGraths Flat, NSW, a fossil site known for its iron-rich rock called ‘goethite’, the new genus of spider is the first ever spider fossil of the Barychelidae family to be found. Similar to the living genus, Monodontium (a brushed trapdoor spider) but five times larger, the spider was named after Dr Simon McClusky who found the specimen. A geospatial scientist based in Canberra, McClusky volunteers his time helping on palaeontological excavations.

Dr McCurry said that there have been very few fossil spiders found in Australia which makes the discovery very significant.

“Only four spider fossils have ever been found throughout the whole continent, which has made it difficult for scientists to understand their evolutionary history. That is why this discovery is so significant, it reveals new information about the extinction of spiders and fills a gap in our understanding of the past.”

“The closest living relative of this fossil now lives in wet forests in Singapore through to Papua New Guinea. This suggests that the group once occupied similar environments in mainland Australia but have subsequently gone extinct as Australia became more arid.”

Queensland Museum arachnologist, Dr Robert Raven, who was the supervising author of the study said this was the largest fossil spider to be found in Australia.  

“Not only is it the largest fossilised spider to be found in Australia but it is the first fossil of the family Barychelidae that has been found worldwide.”

“There are around 300 species of brush-footed trapdoor spiders alive today, but they don’t seem to become fossils very often. This could be because they spend so much time inside burrows and so aren’t in the right environment to be fossilised.”

University of Canberra Associate Professor, Michael Frese, who used stacking microphotography to scan the fossils said that the fossils from McGraths Flat show an amazing level of detailed preservation.

"Scanning electron microscopy allowed us to study minute details of the claws and setae on the spider's pedipalps, legs and the main body. Setae are hair-like structures that can have a range of functions. They can sense chemicals and vibrations, defend the spider against attackers and even make sounds."

The fossil is now housed in the AM’s palaeontology collection and is available online for researchers to study.

A separate paper will be published on the same day in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society describing a jumping spider from McGraths Flat. These are separate publications, but both describe fossils from the same site. Matthew McCurry and Michael Frese are authors on both pieces of work. DOI: doi.org/10.1093/zoolinnean/zlad105

Editors note:

Biographies, images, research paper can be accessed here:  

 

McGraths Flat

First found in 2017, McGraths Flat is named after Nigel McGrath who discovered the first fossils from the site. The site is located near Gulgong in central NSW (Gulgong is a Wiradjuri word that means “deep waterhole”).

 

The Miocene Epoch (~23–5 million years ago) was a time of immense change in Australia. The Australian continent had separated from Antarctica and South America and was drifting northwards. When the Miocene began there was enormous richness and variety of plant and animal life in Australia. But at around 14 million years ago an abrupt change in climate known as the “Middle Miocene Disruption” caused widespread extinctions. Throughout the latter half of the Miocene, Australia gradually became more and more arid, and rainforests turned into the dry shrublands and deserts that now characterise the landscape. The newly discovered fossil site, McGraths Flat, provides an unprecedented look into what Australian ecosystems were like prior to this aridification.

 

About the Australian Museum (AM)                                                       

The Australian Museum (AM) was founded in 1827 and is the nation’s first museum. It is internationally recognised as a natural science and culture institution focused on Australia and the Pacific. The AM’s mission is to ignite wonder, inspire debate and drive change. The AM’s vision is to be a leading voice for the richness of life, the Earth and culture in Australia and the Pacific.

The AM commits to transforming the conversation around climate change, the environment and wildlife conservation; to being a strong advocate for First Nations cultures; and to continuing to develop world-leading science, collections, exhibitions and education programs. With more than 21.9 million objects and specimens and the Australian Museum Research Institute (AMRI), the AM is not only a dynamic source of reliable scientific information on some of the most pressing environmental and social challenges facing our region, but also an important site of cultural exchange and learning.                           

 

# ENDS #        


Key Facts:

A new fossil spider has been  formally named and described  Megamonodontium mccluskyi.

It is  between 11 – 16 million years old. The findings on this new genus of spider have now been published in the 2023 Zoological Journal of Linnean Society.

Tthe first ever spider fossil of the Barychelidae family to be found.

Similar to the living genus, Monodontium (a brushed trapdoor spider) but five times larger, the spider was named after Dr Simon McClusky who found the specimen.

Tere have been very few fossil spiders found in Australia which makes the discovery very significant.


Contact details:

Claire Vince, Media Advisor 

T  0468 726 910

E claire.vince@australian.museum

Media

More from this category

  • General News
  • 26/07/2024
  • 11:49
North Road Cemetery

NORTH ROAD CEMETERY MARKS CENTENARY OF THE DEATH OF AVIATION HERO HARRY BUTLER

MEDIA RELEASEJuly 2024 NORTH ROAD CEMETERY MARKS CENTENARY OF THEDEATH OF AVIATION HERO HARRY BUTLER Captain Harry Butler was an aviation pioneer said to be almost as famous as the premier in the years after World War One – wowing the people of Adelaide with spins, dives and loop-the-loops in his famous “Red Devil” Bristol monoplane. One hundred years on, North Road Cemetery is planning to mark the centenary of Butler’s death on 30 July 1924 and commemorate the life of an extraordinary Yorke Peninsula boy. North Road Cemetery historian Helen Stein says Butler has largely been forgotten today but…

  • Education Training, General News
  • 26/07/2024
  • 10:00
Australian National Maritime Museum

Australian National Maritime Museum brings the wonder of Book Week into the classroom

To celebrate Book Week (17-23 August), the Australian National Maritime Museum will be hosting a series of free online workshops designed to inspire and ignite the creativity of primary school students across Australia. This series of 5 engaging workshops include 3 sessions with some of Australia’s favourite children’s authors, Dr VanessaPirotta, Jackie French, and Jess McGeachin, and 2 sessions with the Museum’s Digital Education Project Officer leading creative writing workshops to spark the imagination and passion of young writers. Conducted via Zoom so that students across Australia can be involved, these live workshops are interactive, and students are encouraged to…

  • Contains:
  • Education Training, General News
  • 26/07/2024
  • 06:01
La Trobe University

Nexus expands into NSW, enhances educational equity

La Trobe University's commitment to advancing educational equity and tackling Australia's teaching shortage has taken a significant step forward, with the expansion of its acclaimed Nexus program into primary schools across New South Wales. Nexus, a first-of-its-kind and proven initiative, is an employment-based pathway to teaching that enables high-performing professionals to transition from other careers while gaining practical experience in school settings. Building on its success in Victoria, where 94 per cent of participants were teaching after graduating from the Nexus program, a new cohort of aspiring primary teachers will start their journey through Nexus from Term 4 in NSW…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.