The unusual
trackways left by these animals at Solnhofen were originally thought to have been made by
birds or
pterosaurs, since they included a cross-shaped marking comparable with the impression of a typical bird foot. Eventually they were correctly identified as arthropod footprints and named
Kouphichnium walchi, as proved by some remarkable 'death traces' showing a
Mesolimulus circling round on itself before dying. The last leg of more advanced horseshoe crabs is modified into a so-called 'pusher' which consists of four plates at the tip which push against the soft sediment rather like a snow-shoe. This was what left the unusual bird-like footprints. Horseshoe crabs in general date to the
Ordovician Period, more than 440 million years ago, and late
Paleozoic Euproops fossils indicate that they have changed little over the last 300 million years. Fossils preserved in Solnhofen limestone are unusual because soft body parts and skeletons are clearly represented. == Species ==