Scientists Discover Human-Sized Lobster That Lived Half-a-Billion Years Ago

A fossil found in Morocco sheds new light on the mysterious creature.

— -- Scientists have discovered a human-sized lobster relative that lived half-a-billion years ago, shedding new light on how crustaceans, spiders and insects evolved over time.

Stretching nearly two meters long, the giant lobster-like species, named Aegirocassis benmoulae used its spine-covered limbs to scrape food from the ocean floor.

"These animals are filling an ecological role that hadn't previously been filled by any other animal," Allison Daley a co-author of the study and a professor at Oxford University’s Department of Zoology, said in a statement.

The species also has pairs of swimming flaps on both sides of its body, something scientist said was likely a precursor to the double-branched legs seen today on related arthropods, such as spiders.

The lobster-like animal was a member of a now-extinct family of marine arthropods called anomalocaridids, which first appeared 520 million years ago during the Cambrian era.