While three species of " Eurypterus " were purportedly discovered in China in 1957, the evidence of them belonging to the genus ( or if they were even eurypterids at all ) is nonexistent.
22.
Planned scene will be of a " Eurypterus " in the foreground with a couple or so other individuals swimming or hunting in the background ( they existed in large groups in fossil beds, probably mass moulting / mating ).
23.
This accounts for why they are the most commonly found genus of eurypterids today . " Eurypterus " ( and other members of Eurypteroidea ), however, were unable to cross vast expanses of oceans between the two supercontinents during the Silurian.
24.
Everything is mostly followed to a T . It has 12 ophisthosomal segments, the size and shape of podomeres are followed explicitly, etc . Aiming for " Eurypterus remipes ", difference between species are usually in the ornamentation, so shouldn't matter on this yet.