Although apparently widespread, and at least locally common, they were first discovered only in the late nineteenth century when they were dredged up by the
Challenger expedition from a depth supposed to be "barren, if not of all life, certainly of animals so high in the scale of existence" (
Charles Spence Bate). Their kinship with the fossil group Eryonoidea, including well-known genera such as
Eryon, was immediately recognised. Since
Eryon and its relatives were only known from fossils, lastly in the
Jurassic, this made the Polychelidae something of a
living fossil. The reason that polychelids remained unknown for so long is that they live on the sea-floor, often at great depths; the family as a whole has a depth range from less than to over . This also accounts for the lack of eyesight, since almost none of the sun's light penetrates to such
abyssal depths. ==Fossil record==