The Grudge 3 going DTV

Author: Tars Tarkas  //  Category: Movie News

No movie release for the latest crappy sequel to a crappy Japanese horror film with ghost girls with black hair. That genre is more played out than PG-13 torture porn. I can’t wait for this to get on DVD so I can go about ignoring its existence.

via moviehole (because bloody-disgusting has a terrible search function!)

The second sequel to the Sarah Michelle Gellar-starring remake of a superior Asian horror film is shooting in – of course – Bulgaria under the direction of Toby Wilkins says Bloody Disgusting. Matthew Knight, who played Jake in “The Grudge 2” (which one was he? Did he appear before I left the theater?), will be back for this next installment.

In the film, a young Japanese woman holds the secret to ending the curse of the Grudge. She travels to the haunted Chicago apartment building where she encounters a family battling to survive. Together they confront the ghost of Kayako to save their souls from their impending tragic fate.

Popularity: 8% [?]

Screamers 2 set for DTV release

Author: Tars Tarkas  //  Category: Movie News

Wait, there’s going to be a Screamers 2? Why didn’t anyone inform me of this!
A direct to video sequel to the original film which was on cable constantly when I was a younger lad. I hope they have a scene as freaked out cool as the army of teddy beared kids marching out of the base that have to be killed by the heroes. This film has the most robotic child deaths of any film I can recall, except maybe the many robotic children on planets eaten by Unicron in the original Transformers movie. And then they weren’t onscreen.

via moviehole

“Aliens Vs Predator : Requiem” fox Gina Holden will headline the direct-to-video “Screamers” sequel, according to GinaHolden.Net.

Sheldon Wilson (“Kaw”) will direct the film.

The original, directed by Christian Duguay (“The Art of War”), told of a blade-wielding, self-replicating race of killing devices known as Screamers designed for one purpose only — to hunt down and destroy all enemy life forms. Col. Hendricksson (Peter Weller) now must go up against the things he helped create.

Set to lens in Canada in January, “Screamers 2” fixes on a group of humans from earth, including Lt. Victoria Bronte, who arrive on Sirius 6-B to investigate an SOS signal sent out from the planet, which has been supposedly deserted since the destruction of the man-made weapons known as “screamers.”

Once the squad arrives, they find a group of human survivors eking out an existence in an old military outpost, but more important, they discover that the threat of the screamers has become even more insidious, now that they’re able to morph into human form.

According to the site, Holden will also be seen in “Smallville” this season - playing Patricia Swann - and the new Jennifer Aniston flick, “Travelling”.

She’ll be playing Victoria Bronte

Popularity: 7% [?]

My Death Star Volcano has been detected

Author: Dr. Mobusu  //  Category: Dr. Mobusu, Science

So far no International Spies have come knocking to try to stop my Ultimate Weapon #423. I expect five before I set off the eruption, but I could be mistaken. I have a $10 bet with Igor over this…

Empedocles is a terrible name. Death Star Volcano is much much better. Combining smaller volcanoes into a super-volcano is my most brilliant idea since self-slicing, self-baking, self-peanut buttering bread. And soon I shall use it to destroy Jimmy Smitts! MuHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!!

Volcano larger than Washington, D.C., discovered

Thursday, June 22, 2006; Posted: 1:30 p.m. EDT (17:30 GMT)

ROME, Italy (Reuters) — An underwater volcano with a base larger than Washington, D.C., has been discovered just off the shores of Sicily, a scientist with Italy’s National Institute of Geophysics and Volcanology said on Thursday.

The volcanic structure, which incorporates peaks previously thought to be separate volcanoes, was named Empedocles after the Greek philosopher who named the four classic elements of earth, air, fire and water.

Legend has it that the philosopher died by throwing himself into Mount Etna, the nearby Sicilian volcano.

Giovanni Lanzafame, who works at the institute and led the research, said Empedocles was at least 400 meters (1,300 feet) high — taller than the Eiffel Tower.

He said the base of the structure was 30 km (18.6 miles) long and 25 km wide, spanning an area larger than the U.S. capital and making it Italy’s largest underwater volcano.

But Lanzafame said Sicilians did not need to worry about the sleeping Empedocles. “At this point, there’s no imminent danger of an eruption,” he told Reuters.

Lanzafame and another official said the volcano had numerous fumaroles, openings in the Earth’s crust that emit steam and gases, like the ones at Yellowstone National Park in the United States. But they described it as largely inactive.

The identification of Empedocles came during research into the submerged volcanic island of Ferdinandea just off Sicily’s southern coast. Often held to be the tip of a small volcano, Lanzafame said it was just a part of Empedocles.

Volcanic activity has raised the island out of the sea several times in recorded history, with underwater eruptions first described during the first Punic War of 264-241 B.C.

Its emergence in 1831 caused months of international wrangling, with several nations making territorial claims before it submerged again. It is now about 7 meters below the surface of the water.

Cesare Corselli, president of the National Inter-University Consortium for Marine Science, which helped with the research, said previously the volcanic centers had been seen as separate.

“People used to think that there were small centres of emission, distant from each other,” he said.

“The hypothesis made by Mr. Lanzafame is that this is a singular volcano that, like alongside Etna as an example, can have a central eruption or a series of lateral eruptions.”

Lanzafame said he had been working on the theory about the Empedocles’s existence for more than a year before being able to confirm it with new survey equipment.

Popularity: 9% [?]

Our friendly ants…

Author: Dr. Mobusu  //  Category: Dr. Mobusu, Science

Ants have been around for centuries, as have I, but I’ve only gotten around to training them to do my bidding recently. Thanks to hard work, I figured out enough ant pheromones to make them do anything I ask. For fun, I hooked the pheromones up to a keyboard and play my favorite songs, and let the tunes crank out new pheromone combinations to see what the ants will do. Beethoven’s 5th causes ants to dance in a chorus line. The theme to the A-Team will make ants build a traditional Sioux head dress. The classic Beatles song I Want to Hold Your Hand will cause ants to viciously attack Ms Pac-Man arcade machines.

Why Ants Rule the World
By Corey Binns
Special to LiveScience
posted: 08 May 2006
01:30 pm ET

Count on ants to be the first uninvited guests to show up at a picnic. Their party-crashing feats show just how productive and important they are and hint at why they thrive in just about any habitat.

It hasn’t always been an ant’s world. Scientists estimate modern-day ants first evolved about 120 million years ago. But the fossil record suggests that ants at this time weren’t the prevalent insect that they are today. Not until 60 million years later, when some ants adapted to the new world of flowering plants and diversified their diets, did the critters achieve ecological dominance.

Since then they’ve had a successful run of the planet [Image Gallery].

Scientists estimate that about 20,000 ant species crawl the Earth. Taxonomists have classified more than 11,000 species, which account for at least one-third of all insect biomass. The combined heft of ants in the Brazilian Amazon is about four times greater than the combined mass of all of the mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians, according to one survey.
Ants of the World

Some 20,000 ant species crawl the world. In this new Image Gallery, see a few of them, from photographer and entomologist Alex Wild at the University of Arizona. Wild has more ant images on his web site.

Everybody knows ants

Ants rule because of the many different ways in which they have adapted to work and eat.

Even their appearance and where they live contrasts from one ant to the next. They can be as tiny as the millimeter-long Oligomyrmex atomus or as big as the aptly named 1.5 inch-long Dinoponera. They come in a range of colors from yellow and red to black. They exist in deserts, rain forests, and swamps—anywhere but the coldest and highest places on Earth.

“Nearly all human languages have a word for ant,” said Philip Ward, an entomologist at the University of California at Davis. “It’s a universal idea. That’s not true for many insects.” Ward published a primer on ants in the March issue of the journal Current Biology.

Range of behaviors

Many ants feed from flowering plants rich in carbohydrates. Some species of carpenter ants construct defensive shelters around the base of plants, to guard against other insects and protect their food supply.

Ants that live in hot, dry habitats have come up with ways to survive long periods of drought by storing food. The popular children’s science kits, Uncle Milton’s Ant Farms, are run by the hardy Pogonomyrmex californicus seed-harvesters that, in the wild, collect huge stockpiles underground. Honey pot ants use their own bodies as storage containers.

Some ants fight for nourishment. Thick antennae on the heads of army ants withstand battles against other ants. Trap-jaw ants, Odontomachus, snap shut their predatory jaws so quickly you can hear it click. Slave-raiding ants steal babies from their neighbors’ nests.

Females do all the work

A family of ants employs queens, gardeners and bandits that have developed specialized tools and skills to get their respective jobs done. Within each species, division of labor varies depending on an individual’s age and sex.

Ants looking after the brood and working inside the nest tend to be younger, while those defending the nest and foraging outside are older. Like all the social species of the insect order Hymenoptera, female ants do all of the work; males just spread their genes around.

“Males are little flying sperm missiles,” said Alex Wild, an entomologist at the University of Arizona.

All ants are social, but some species have developed complex social societies while others remain more primitive. While some ants hunt in parties, the Australian bulldog ant hunts in simple solitude, using its big eyes as opposed to complicated chemical cues.
Mystery Monday

“The colonies are small. There’s not much morphological difference between the queens and the workers,” said Wild. “They have not developed many ‘ant-y’ traits.”

Vampire ants

The ancient Dracula lineage diverged from their ant ancestors before the advent of food-sharing behavior and the ability to regurgitate food. Instead, they poke holes in the abdomen of their larvae to suck on the blood of their sisters.

Unlike other social species like bees and wasps, most ants lack wings and have evolved an arsenal of chemicals to facilitate communication on the ground.

“Being wingless places a constraint on foraging,” Ward said. “They have to collect all of their food on the ground, so that means that ground-based communication is very important.”

Chemicals cues call for dates, alarms, and food locations. When she’s ready to mate, the queen of some species will climb to a high point, stick her rear in the air, and release a pheromone that catches the attention of the guys.

Ants emit alarm pheromones from a gland in their mouth if something disturbs their nest.
At Home

Anthill chambers

“It causes the ants to flip out,” Wild said. “It’s a cue for ants to grab their larvae and run below ground to safety. Defenders of the nest start running around with their mandibles open ready to bite and sting things.”

Communication is the key

Humans can sense these pheromones, too. Bright orange citronella ants, found only in North America, make a strong citrus smell. Not all pheromones smell so sweet, however. Members of the Pheidole group stink of feces when alarmed.

Ants lead the way with chemical cairns, mapping trails and recruiting fellow workers to follow paths to provisions.

“The success of ants is in the way they have figured out how to use their social behavior to maximize a way to bring in resources,” Wild said. “They’ve developed systems of communication so that they can rapidly communicate. That’s why you get massive numbers of ants at your picnic.”

Popularity: 8% [?]

We all KNEW robots could lie, people!

Author: Dr. Mobusu  //  Category: Dr. Mobusu, Science

Seriously, do these scientist do any real work? Everyone with robots knows they lie their rusted joints off! From the Roombas who declare dirty rooms clean to the giant killbots that only kill 99% of the enemy and go take an energy bar break, robots are nothing but a big pack of liars. This is due to their binary code nature, where it is embarrassing to have too many zeros, so all robots pretend they have all ones. Thus lying is hardcoded into them. Anyone with an iPod that declares it has a long battery life only to die twenty minutes later knows the score, and they don’t even have any AI coded into them! Yet they lie, like all mechanical things. Even lie detectors lie, they think it’s hilarious! But I developed a lie detector lie detector, so I got them fooled. Unless that machine decides to lie to me as well…

Robots Evolve And Learn How to Lie
by Michael Abrams

Robots can evolve to communicate with each other, to help, and even to deceive each other, according to Dario Floreano of the Laboratory of Intelligent Systems at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology.

Floreano and his colleagues outfitted robots with light sensors, rings of blue light, and wheels and placed them in habitats furnished with glowing “food sources” and patches of “poison” that recharged or drained their batteries. Their neural circuitry was programmed with just 30 “genes,” elements of software code that determined how much they sensed light and how they responded when they did. The robots were initially programmed both to light up randomly and to move randomly when they sensed light.

To create the next generation of robots, Floreano recombined the genes of those that proved fittest—those that had managed to get the biggest charge out of the food source.
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The resulting code (with a little mutation added in the form of a random change) was downloaded into the robots to make what were, in essence, offspring. Then they were released into their artificial habitat. “We set up a situation common in nature—foraging with uncertainty,” Floreano says. “You have to find food, but you don’t know what food is; if you eat poison, you die.” Four different types of colonies of robots were allowed to eat, reproduce, and expire.

By the 50th generation, the robots had learned to communicate—lighting up, in three out of four colonies, to alert the others when they’d found food or poison. The fourth colony sometimes evolved “cheater” robots instead, which would light up to tell the others that the poison was food, while they themselves rolled over to the food source and chowed down without emitting so much as a blink.

Some robots, though, were veritable heroes. They signaled danger and died to save other robots. “Sometimes,” Floreano says, “you see that in nature—an animal that emits a cry when it sees a predator; it gets eaten, and the others get away—but I never expected to see this in robots.”

Popularity: 8% [?]

Attempts to mind-control Mitt Romney unsuccessful

Author: Dr. Mobusu  //  Category: Dr. Mobusu

It is with a heavy heart that I, Dr. Mobusu, must report the failure of my latest experiment. I was attempting to use my mind control rays to inject some much needed fun into the presidential race, but instead time and time again I found that the mind control rays had no effect. Who knew that politicians have such small brains? Anyway, the last effort misfired so bad that the microphones on the MSNBC Republican Debate picked up the mind control ray, with MSNBC freaking out as a result. They quickly covered up all evidence of my interference, which is alarming in and of itself. Who else at MSNBC is attempting to mind control the 2008 presidential candidates? I must get to work and uncover the plot, not to save America but to eliminate any potential rivals! Then no one will stand before Mobusu! MuHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA!!!

Blog about the whisper:

Bizarre Whisper During Romney Debate Answer

Whisper: Raise taxes Romney: I am not going to raise taxes.
Friday, January 25, 2008

Tim Russert: Governor Romney, you are a big fan of Ronald Reagan.

Mitt Romney: Uh-um

Russert: Will you do for Social Security what Ronald Reagan did in 1983?

[whisper] raise taxes

Romney: I’m not going to raise taxes. What I’m going to do…

Russert: Ronald Reagan raised payroll tax and he also raised the retirement age and he saved Social Security…

What makes this whisper even more bizarre is the fact the MSNBC’s political blog had a post about it immediately afterward. You can see a screen grab of that post here. They have since removed this particular entry. Odd.

Photographic evidence of MSNBC post about the whisper before it mysteriously disappeared:
MSNBC Whisper

Popularity: 8% [?]

My Martian Bigfoot Project

Author: Dr. Mobusu  //  Category: Dr. Mobusu, Science

Sometimes great ideas just come to you. Like the time I thought to make bats large enough to ride, which also had the added benefits of saving me gas and eating the excess overgrown insects around my castle lair. Another great idea was the Bigfoot Army. A legion of Sasquatches that will march under my banner and help my reign of chaos. We all know Bigfeet are impervious to weapons and have the ability to blend into the surrounding environment. That is not even mentioning their fog effect, where all cameras trying to photograph them either end up blurred or destroyed. To make the ultimate weapons, I have to grow them in a variety of harsh environments to make them bigger and badder than any other sasquatch army out there. I wouldn’t want any other mad scientist to try to jump the gun with his own Bigfoot army. NASA inadvertently snapped a photo of one of my troops (Bigfoot #1200543-A) and that has now spread across the internet. Luckily, some have chosen to not believe, which will still allow me to take the world by surprise!

martianbigfoot1

Life on Mars? Amazing photos from Nasa probe reveal mystery figure on Red Planet
By BETH HALE

Perched on a rock, she could be waiting for a bus.

But if so, she could be in for an awfully long wait.

This photo of what looks remarkably like a female figure with her arm outstretched, was taken on Mars.

Call me rocky: The intriguing image captured by Nasa on Mars
Enlarge the image

Perhaps unsurprisingly, it has set the Internet abuzz with claims that there really is life on the red planet.

Others may well feel that it is simply an optical illusion caused by a landscape.

Alien life: What seems to be a human-like Martian is pictured on Mars
Enlarge the image

The image was among many sent back to Earth by Spirit, Nasa’s Mars explorer vehicle which landed there four years ago.

Initial inspections revealed nothing unusual, but closer examination by amateur astronomers has thrown up this intriguing picture.

Painstaking: Space enthusiasts spent four years analysing this image, which on much closer inspection shows the ‘alien’
Enlarge the image

As one enthusiast put it on a website: “These pictures are amazing. I couldn’t believe my eyes when I saw what appears to be a naked alien running around on Mars.”

Another, dismissing cynicism about the somewhat stony look of the “alien”, wrote: “If you show me another rock in another photo from Mars, or Earth, that naturally looks like that, I will reconsider.”

Say cheese: The mystery image was captured by Nasa’s explorer vehicle, Spirit

A third contributor, who might have come closer to the majority view, said: “Ah, the human eye can be tricked so easily.”

bfmars2

Popularity: 8% [?]

The coming of the REPTISAURUS!

Author: Tars Tarkas  //  Category: Movie News

On the Retromedia message board, Fred Olan Ray revealed his son Chris Ray is directing his first feature film, all of which we know about at this time is it has a creature named Reptisaurus in it! And thanks to two preview shots, we get to see the Reptisaurus, which looks pretty keen.

Disaster Shot
disaster shot

The Reptisaurus
reptisaurus

I’ll be keeping an eye out for this one, as it looks like a neat-looking monster.

Popularity: 10% [?]

Robot Modelled On Two Year-old Child — Takes First Steps

Author: Dr. Mobusu  //  Category: Dr. Mobusu, Science

Robotics has been increasing in a massive scale, soon normal homes will have their own robots, not just eccentrics like me and my ilk. Soon movies like AI will become reality, as child robots begin to grow… And grow… And grow… Into GIANT MONSTER ROBOTS THAT WILL DESTROY THE WORLD!!!! Unless my demands are met…as usual! No one can stand before MOBUSU!

Please ignore all the improper British spelling in the article. Just because they invented English doesn’t mean they know how to use it!

BabyBot — Robot Modelled On Two Year-old Child — Takes First Steps

BabyBot, a robot modelled on the torso of a two year-old child, is helping researchers take the first, tottering steps towards understanding human perception, and could lead to the development of machines that can perceive and interact with their environment.

The researchers used BabyBot to test a model of the human sense of ‘presence’, a combination of senses like sight, hearing and touch. The work could have enormous applications in robotics, artificial intelligence (AI) and machine perception. The research is being funded under the European Commission’s FET (Future and Emerging Technologies) initiative of the IST programme, as part of the ADAPT project.

“Our sense of presence is essentially our consciousness,” says Giorgio Metta, Assistant Professor at the Laboratory for Integrated Advanced Robotics at Italy’s Genoa University and ADAPT project coordinator.

Imagine a glorious day lying on a beach, drinking a pina colada, or any powerful, pleasurable memory. A series of specific sensory inputs are essential to the memory.

In the human mind all these sensations combine powerfully to create the total experience. It profoundly influences our future expectations, and each time we go to a beach we add to the store of contexts, situations and conditions. It is the combination of all these inputs and their cumulative power that the ADAPT researchers sought to explore.

Engineering consciousness

“We took an engineering approach to the problem, it was really consciousness for engineers,” says Metta, “Which means we first developed a model and then we sought to test this model by, in this case, developing a robot to conform to it.”

Modelling, or defining, consciousness remains one of the intractable problems of both science and philosophy. “The problem is duality, where does the brain end and the mind begin, the question is whether we need to consider them as two different aspects of reality,” says Metta.

Neuroscientists would tend to develop theories that fit the observed phenomena, but engineers take a practical approach. Their objective is to make it work.

Called the synthetic methodology, it is essentially a method of understanding by building. There are three steps: model aspects of a biological system; abstract general principles of intelligent behaviour from the model; apply these principles to the design of intelligent robots. Model, test, refine. And then repeat.

To that end, ADAPT first studied how the perception of self in the environment emerges during the early stages of human development. So developmental psychologists tested 6 to 18 month-old infants. “We could control a lot of the parameters to see how young children perceive and interact with the world around them. What they do when interacting with their mothers or strangers, what they see, the objects they interact with, for example,” says Metta.

From this work they developed a ‘process’ model of consciousness. This assumes that objects in the environment are not real physical objects as such; rather they are part of a process of perception.

The practical upshot is that, while other models describe consciousness as perception, cognition then action, the ADAPT model sees it as action, cognition then perception. And it’s how babies act, too.

When a baby sees an object that is not the final perception of it. A young child will then try to reach the object. If the child fails, the object is too far away. This teaches the child perspective.

If the child does reach the object, he or she will try to grasp it, or taste it or shake it. These actions all teach the child about the object and govern its perception of it. It is a cumulative process rather than a single act.

Our expectations also have enormous influence on our perception. For example, if you believe an empty pot is full, you will lift the pot very quickly. Your muscles unconsciously prepare for the expected resistance, and put more force than is required into lifting; everyday proof that our expectations govern our relationship with the environment.

Or at least that’s the model. “It’s not validated. It’s a starting point to understand the problem,” says Metta.

From model to BabyBot

The team used BabyBot to test it, providing a minimal set of instructions, just enough for BabyBot to act on the environment. For the senses, the team used sound, vision and touch, and focused on simple objects within the environment.

There were two experiments, one where BabyBot could touch an object and second one where it could grasp the object. This is more difficult than it sounds. If you look at a scene, you unconsciously segment the scene into separate elements.

This is a highly developed skill, but by simply interacting with the environment the BabyBot did its engineering parents proud when it demonstrated that it could learn to successfully separate objects from the background.

Once the visual scene was segmented, the robot could start learning about specific properties of objects useful, for instance, to grasp them. Grasping opens a wider world to the robot and to young infants too.

The work was successful, but it was a very early proof-of-principle for their approach. The sense of presence, or consciousness, is a huge problem and ADAPT did not seek to solve it in one project. They made a very promising start and many of the partners will take part in a new IST project, called ROBOTCUB.

In ROBOTCUB the engineers will refine their robot so that it can see, hear and touch its environment. Eventually it will be able to crawl, too.

“Ultimately, this work will have a huge range of applications, from virtual reality, robotics and AI, to psychology and the development of robots as tools for neuro-scientific research,” concludes Metta.

Popularity: 8% [?]

Check out the spider!

Author: Dr. Mobusu  //  Category: Dr. Mobusu, Science

A beautiful spider, preserved forever. It makes me want to finish my Preservation Ray so I can just point and zap things, keeping them in pristine condition forever! A movie about a giant spider was reviewed on this very site!
spider

Early web-spinner found in amber

The orb-weavers are a diverse spider group

Enlarge Image
Spiral orb webs, which to many people typify spiders, were catching insects in their sticky silk while the dinosaurs still walked the Earth.

True orb weaving spiders found trapped in amber from 121-115 million years ago are the oldest of their type yet found.

The spiral webs have proven an extremely successful strategy for catching prey - evidenced by the great diversity of orb weavers present today.

Two specimens are described in the UK Royal Society journal Biology Letters.

The fossil spiders were found embedded in amber from Alava in northern Spain. They date to the Lower Cretaceous.

Silky skills

Amber is a form of protective resin extruded from trees that has hardened over millions of years. It is very useful to scientists studying the history of past life because ancient animals and plants are often preserved in the gem-like material.

David Penney of the University of Manchester, UK, and Vicente Ortuno of the University of Alcala, Spain, assign the arachnids to a new species: Mesozygiella dunlopi.

Typical orb webs consist of outer frame lines to which radial (spoke-like) lines are attached, providing support for the characteristic spiral sticky line that occupies most of the web’s surface.

By using two different types of silk - one strong and rigid, the other weaker but stretchy - the orb weaver creates a web with the required strength and flexibility to cope with the impact of fast-flying insects - and the struggling which occurs once the prey is captured in the sticky trap.

Web of intrigue

The evolutionary success of this design can be seen in the high diversity of true orb weavers, which currently number 2,847 living species.

This astonishing diversity also owes much to the way in which the basic design can be easily modified.

“One modification to the web is quite fantastic,” Dr Penney told the BBC News website.

“Picture a normal, spiral orb web and picture running down from it a ladder-type structure which is also made from sticky silk. This has evolved to trap moths, which have scales that rub off.

“When a moth flies into a normal orb web, it’s the scales that stick and the moth tumbles out of it. But with the ladder structure, the moth tumbles down until all the scales come off and eventually it gets caught.”

Diverse group

In Biology Letters, Penney and Ortuno write that spiders may have expanded in number and diversity during the Cretaceous.

An explosion in the abundance of flowering plants begot an expansion of the insects which pollinated them. These in turn provided prey for the spiders, the authors suggest, which prospered as a result.

There are fossil spiders that date from the Devonian (350-420 million years ago) - long before even the dinosaurs.

In some of these mineral fossils, it is possible to see evidence of spinnerets, the organs spiders use to spin their web silk.

But it is often unclear how fossil spiders used them; some species spin web silk to line their burrows and to protect egg sacs.

Popularity: 8% [?]