A grotesque creature abundant in the Kishasha Valley of Uganda is the three-horned chameleon. It grows to a length exceeding twelve inches and the males look like miniature versions of the ancient dinosaur monster, triceratops. Three curious horns, an inch to an inch-and-a-half in length, protrude from the nose and between the eyes of males.
These are extremely pugnacious animals; they use their horns in fights to the finish. At times the contests develop into prolonged pushing matches with the horns interlocked, but a really vigorous fighter can dispose of an adversary in a few minutes. African natives are terrified of these demoniacal-looking little animals.
The Strange Ways of Spiders
“With other classes of animals, and even with plants, man feels a certain kinship—but spiders are not of his world. Their strange habits, ethics and psychology seem to belong to some other planet where conditions are more monstrous, more active, more insane, more atrocious, more infernal than on our own. Frightfulness and ruthlessness appear a part of their nature and we stand appalled when it dawns upon us that they are far better armed and equipped for their life work than we for ours.”
Thus writes Dr. W. E. Stafford, U. S. Department of Agriculture naturalist. There probably is quite general agreement with his sentiments. One chills at the picture of some other planet where spiders and their kin who have evolved minds equal to that of humans are the dominant animals.
Once gigantic spider-like creatures ruled this world. They were as big as lions or gorillas. Their realm was the earth of the Silurian geological era of 350,000,000 years ago—a time of warm, quiet seas which, especially in the northern hemisphere, covered large areas that now are dry land. These creatures were the euripterids, or sea scorpions, whose nearest extant relatives are the horseshoe crabs with sky-blue blood that are common along the Atlantic coast of the United States, and the venom-fanged land scorpions. They exceeded in size all living invertebrate animals.
Many were five to six feet long; one was nine feet long. Presumably they were free-swimming, predacious creatures with massive, crushing jaws. Their chief prey, it is believed, were the much smaller, crab-like trilobites with whom they shared a common ancestry. These were shelled animals the imprints of whose hard shells in mud (which later became rock) are among the most ancient records of animal life on this planet. The trilobites were creatures who crawled on shallow sea bottom. Their only defense was to roll themselves in balls. They appear to have been the dominant form of life for at least 100,000,000 years. They continued a precarious existence after the evolution of the great pseudo-spiders, but were well on their way to extinction. The massive jaws of the euripterids could crush their thin shells with ease. The dominance of these new masters of the sea would be challenged only by the gigantic mollusks, but for many millenia they appear to have held their own against these frightful monsters.
Their decline had started by the end of the Silurian period and they were extinct in another hundred million years. The reason for their decline is unknown, but perhaps it was related to some decided change in temperature and distribution of the waters. Remarkably well preserved remains of the monsters have been found imbedded in limestone on Oesel Island, in the Baltic. During the Silurian era life was just starting to emigrate from the oceans and establish a precarious foothold on land. Among the earliest land fossils are those of small scorpions, distantly related to the erstwhile master race. The euripterids themselves, however, never tried to leave the sea.
Worms With a Thousand Eyes
There are worms with a thousand eyes. They are, for the most part, animals of the dank, dark floors of tropical rain forests.