Turns out, this ancient worm had hidden eyes and (terrifying) mouth

Edit Mashable 26 Jun 2015
Heads or tails? Scientists finally have an answer in the case of the odd ancient worm Hallucigenia, which leaves fossils so bizarre that researchers once thought its top was its bottom and its back was its front ... SEE ALSO. See images of the Hallucigenia worm & other Cambrian creatures ... Rethinking Hallucigenia ... The ring of teeth hints at a mystery that's long plagued the group Ecdysozoa, of which Hallucigenia was an early member....

Alien-Looking Spiky, Leggy Worm Gets a Head for the First Time

Edit IFL Science 25 Jun 2015
In the 1970s, when researchers first examined the bizarre half-billion-year-old fossils of a worm-like creature with a double row of spines on its back and several pairs of legs that end with claws, they couldn’t make heads or tails of it ... The findings are published in Nature this week ... Previous molecular work had already grouped arthropods and roundworms into Ecdysozoa, and this is finally being confirmed by morphological evidence ... ....

Scientists finally found this insane-looking worm's head after searching for decades

Edit Business Insider 25 Jun 2015
"It seemed like it was about time that we went back and had a sort of fundamental rethink of the animal from the ground up," Smith told Live Science. The team studied hundreds of fossils of Hallucigenia sparsa, which lived 508 million years ago ... In fact, it wasn't even part of the body ... Circle smile ... sparsa's mouth ... The ring of teeth hints at a mystery that's long plagued the group Ecdysozoa, of which Hallucigenia was an early member ... ....

Heads or tails? Toothy grin completes prehistoric worm

Edit Yahoo Daily News 24 Jun 2015
- Evolutionary clue - ... First identified in the 1970s, Hallucigenia's closest living relative is the toothless velvet worm, which in turn belongs to a vast family known as ecdysozoa -- animals like many insects and worms, lobsters and spiders which shed their exoskeleton. Hallucigenia's newly discovered choppers has led Smith and Caron to conclude that the ancestor of ecdysozoa must also have had a toothy mouth and throat....

500-Million-Year-Old 'Smiling' Worm Rears Its Head

Edit Yahoo Daily News 24 Jun 2015
Heads or tails? Scientists finally have an answer in the case of the odd ancient worm Hallucigenia, which leaves fossils so bizarre that researchers once thought its top was its bottom and its back was its front ... "But actually, its simple mouth used to be much more complicated.". Rethinking Hallucigenia ... The ring of teeth hints at a mystery that's long plagued the group Ecdysozoa, of which Hallucigenia was an early member....
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