.In 2017, W. Scott Persons IV and John Acorn reported finding an
S. acuminata specimen, MB.A 863, in the
Patrick Burn Formation of Scotland, dated to the
Telychian, around 430 million years ago. The specimen was a complete and articulated series of telsonal, postabdominal and preabdominal segments, and it showed a very strong lateral curvature in the postabdomen. Persons and Acorn admitted that it might have experienced some disarticulation postmortem or could represent a partial molt (exuviae), but concluded that since there was no apparent disarticulation in the metasoma, it was likely that the articulation seen in the postabdominal segments (which is also seen in some other eurypterid fossils, such as of
Eurypterus and
Alkenopterus) would have been possible in life. However, the Persons and Acorn theory was challenged in 2018 by James Lamsdell, David Marshall, and Derek Briggs. Even though the Persons and Acorn study claimed that the fossil didn't show any signs of disarticulation, Lamsdell, Marshall, and Briggs showed this is likely not true. They argued that both tergite 8 and 10 clearly overlapped the other tergites in an unnatural way. Furthermore, they noted that the specimen was definitely a molt rather than a carcass, and argued that this meant that the pose the fossil was in did not represent a possible life position. They further argued that since the telson of
Slimonia also possessed a keel, this would have created significant drag on it while Slimonia was trying to laterally sweep the telson to stab its prey. Lastly, they argued that the serrations on the telson would most likely be attachment points for setae that would have aided the animal in sensing the water flow to make steering much easier.
Visual acuity, the clarity of vision, can be determined in arthropods by determining number of lenses in their
compound eyes and the interommatidial angle (shortened as IOA and referring to the angle between the optical axes of the adjacent lenses). The IOA is especially important as it can be used to distinguish different ecological roles in arthropods, being low in modern active arthropod predators.
Slimonia was very similar to the basal pterygotid
Erettopterus in terms of visual acuity, with the number of lenses being comparable to those of
Pterygotus and
Jaekelopterus and possessing an IOA between 2 and 3 (which is higher than the IOA of
Pterygotus and
Jaekelopterus, suggesting that the visual acuity of
Slimonia was good, but not as good as in the derived pterygotids). == Paleoecology ==