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Check out this 5-foot-long sea scorpion that once roamed Earth's oceans

 
This rendering provided by Yale University shows a Pentecopterus decorahensis. Earth's first big predatory monster was a weird water bug, newly found fossils show. Almost half a billion years ago, Earth's dominant large predator was a sea scorpion that grew to 5 feet 7 inches with a dozen claw arms sprouting from its head and a spike tail, according to a new study. [Patrick J. Lynch| Yale University via AP]
This rendering provided by Yale University shows a Pentecopterus decorahensis. Earth's first big predatory monster was a weird water bug, newly found fossils show. Almost half a billion years ago, Earth's dominant large predator was a sea scorpion that grew to 5 feet 7 inches with a dozen claw arms sprouting from its head and a spike tail, according to a new study. [Patrick J. Lynch| Yale University via AP]
Published Sept. 3, 2015

Two words you probably don't want to hear in one sentence? Sea scorpion. Well, happy Tuesday.

Scientists have discovered the world's oldest specimen of (yikes) sea scorpion in an ancient meteor impact crater in Iowa, and it's a real doozy.

About 460 million years ago (back when Iowa was an ocean) the creature Pentecopterus decorahensis skittered about on the ocean floor. Described in a study published Monday in BMC Evolutionary Biology, the sea scorpion is 10 million years older than any previously discovered member of its group. And, at an estimated 5.5 feet long, it's one of the biggest, too.

"This is the first real big predator," lead study author and Yale University researcher James Lamsdell told the Associated Press.

Based on the complexity of the weird creature's body, the researchers say, it probably wasn't the first sea scorpion to join the seas . So it could push the origin of its group — eurypterids, extinct relatives of arachnids — back even further.

"The new species is incredibly bizarre. The shape of the paddle — the leg which it would use to swim — is unique, as is the shape of the head. It's also big — over a meter and a half long," Lamsdell said in a statement.

The new species — named for an ancient Greek warship called the penteconter, which it loosely resembles in body shape — was most likely a fierce predator, based on its large front arms covered in long spines, similar to the ones that horseshoe crabs use to handle their food. Meanwhile other, rear-facing legs covered in tiny hairs for sensing the environment would have helped it move about the sea.

The creatures' fossilized exoskeletons (the hard outer shell like those of cockroaches and crabs) were incredibly well-preserved, Lamsdell said in a statement. Scientists could basically peel them off of the rock and study them under a microscope, revealing details about what the animals looked like and how they moved.

"At times it seems like you are studying the shed skin of a modern animal," he said, "an incredibly exciting opportunity for any paleontologist."

A cool find to be sure, but we're glad that sea scorpions had their heyday half a billion years ago.