Pycnogonid
Well-Known Member
People imagine the carboniferous as this backwards alien world where every arthropod was a giant invincible monster and vertebrates where tiny pipsqueaks that cowered in fear from such monsters.
This view could not be more wrong. The majority of carboniferous arthropods where tiny, just like modern ones. Only a handful could be called giant. And tetrapods had not become fully established on land, so arthropods had more ecological freedom. Even with this in mind, there where some pretty monstrous tetrapods that out sized arthropleura. The few giant bugs that did exist where more due to circumstance than anything else.
So, the carboniferous was an age where terrestrial life was starting to diversify into many forms that are no longer around today. And this wave happened to include some big bugs.
This view could not be more wrong. The majority of carboniferous arthropods where tiny, just like modern ones. Only a handful could be called giant. And tetrapods had not become fully established on land, so arthropods had more ecological freedom. Even with this in mind, there where some pretty monstrous tetrapods that out sized arthropleura. The few giant bugs that did exist where more due to circumstance than anything else.
So, the carboniferous was an age where terrestrial life was starting to diversify into many forms that are no longer around today. And this wave happened to include some big bugs.