• Study: Spiders had ancient big-clawed relatives
    64 replies, posted
You know what's weird? Every life form on this planet had to have come from the same ancestor/creator. I mean look at it, we evolved from apes and monkeys. Monkeys/Apes evolved from lizards and man-eating short handed monsters down to fish and scaly/slimy little creatures roaming around in the depths of sea all the way down to the bottom where the basic material for life had started, bacteria etc. If that resource of life separated into animals and humans basically, dogs,cats,and rodents. What if they originated from the same place. You have to scroll back to like, what... the vagina burst of the universe. Even then life was around. I know I may sound crazy, but... think bout' it.
Spiders had ancient big-clawed relative? They still exist. They are called [B]Scorpions[/B]! What if, all live in the galaxy have the same template as how we see on Earth?
[QUOTE=pansarkurt;42563856]Just for fun, here's history's largest arthropod, the sea scorpion. [IMG]http://static.ddmcdn.com/gif/sea-scorpion-1.jpg[/IMG] (or the largest one we've found evidence of)[/QUOTE] Even more hilarious, those things still exist: [IMG]http://surbrook.devermore.com/superpics/beasts/set_1/sea_scorpion.jpg[/IMG] Though thankfully they're a bit smaller.
[QUOTE=RayvenQ;42570621][img]http://i.telegraph.co.uk/multimedia/archive/01080/earth-graphics-200_1080291a.jpg[/img] You were saying?[/QUOTE] the fuck is that
[QUOTE=Daniel Smith;42567577]If that's true than every species the size of a small fox should be extinct.[/QUOTE] You do realize invertebrates breathe different from vertebrates right? While vertebrates take in oxygen from their surroundings using gills/lungs, bugs don't have lungs, instead they use small holes called spiracles to breathe. While it is effective enough for small insects, they would not be able to exchange air fast enough in larger insects.
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