<documentID-CLB-Dataset="24666"ID-DOI="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/evolsyst.3.37464"ID-GBIF-Dataset="8ac0c1d8-2ebc-40bd-bcf6-7216ce5d8d66"ID-Pensoft-Pub="2535-0730-2-109"ID-Pensoft-UUID="48BB2ADCDFB750ACA7D9EC306EC80801"ID-ZooBank="87602625AF8D4A3FBAE5F35C09FB6C00"ModsDocID="2535-0730-2-109"checkinTime="1575997079287"checkinUser="pensoft"docAuthor="Monod, Lionel, Duperre, Nadine & Harms, Danilo"docDate="2019"docId="754693DA4F5755C3A91F852DF1CD04EF"docLanguage="en"docName="EvolutSyst 3(2): 109-200"docOrigin="Evolutionary Systematics 3 (2)"docSource="http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/evolsyst.3.37464"docTitle="Urodacus fossor"docType="treatment"docVersion="6"id="48BB2ADCDFB750ACA7D9EC306EC80801"lastPageNumber="109"masterDocId="48BB2ADCDFB750ACA7D9EC306EC80801"masterDocTitle="An annotated catalogue of the scorpion types (Arachnida, Scorpiones) held in the Zoological Museum Hamburg. Part I: Parvorder Iurida Soleglad & Fet, 2003"masterLastPageNumber="200"masterPageNumber="109"pageNumber="109"updateTime="1732626668489"updateUser="ExternalLinkService">
<mods:titleid="7E8FDF443FA7BCD632B80FB4116961C8">An annotated catalogue of the scorpion types (Arachnida, Scorpiones) held in the Zoological Museum Hamburg. Part I: Parvorder Iurida Soleglad & Fet, 2003</mods:title>
<bibRefCitationid="92A50C5199F088EF6B4F6021525039C9"author="Koch, LE"journalOrPublisher="Records of the Western Australian Museum"pageId="0"pageNumber="109"pagination="83 - 367"refId="B40"refString="Koch, LE, 1977. The taxonomy, geographic distribution and evolutionary radiation of Australo-Papuan scorpions. Records of the Western Australian Museum 5: 83 - 367"title="The taxonomy, geographic distribution and evolutionary radiation of Australo-Papuan scorpions."volume="5"year="1977">Koch 1977</bibRefCitation>
<bibRefCitationid="7CEF5FC744114B94E07A28DBF824BCC4"DOI="https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.part.1497"author="Kraepelin, K"journalOrPublisher="Arkiv foer Zoologi"pageId="0"pageNumber="109"pagination="1 - 43"refId="B90"refString="Kraepelin, K, 1916. Scolopendriden und Skorpione. Results of Dr. E. Mjoeberg's Swedish scientific expeditions to Australia, 1910-1913. Arkiv foer Zoologi 10: 1 - 43"title="Scolopendriden und Skorpione. Results of Dr. E. Mjoeberg's Swedish scientific expeditions to Australia, 1910 - 1913."url="https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.part.1497"volume="10"year="1916">Kraepelin (1916)</bibRefCitation>
<bibRefCitationid="70F34707E3047F60929CF6A76995E48F"author="Koch, LE"journalOrPublisher="Records of the Western Australian Museum"pageId="0"pageNumber="109"pagination="83 - 367"refId="B40"refString="Koch, LE, 1977. The taxonomy, geographic distribution and evolutionary radiation of Australo-Papuan scorpions. Records of the Western Australian Museum 5: 83 - 367"title="The taxonomy, geographic distribution and evolutionary radiation of Australo-Papuan scorpions."volume="5"year="1977">Koch (1977)</bibRefCitation>
. The second specimen cannot be found in the ZMH collection and is possibly housed in the Natural History Museum in Stockholm. Kraepelin also mentioned in the original description that these scorpions were found in burrows which are four feet deep, have a spiraling shape and a half-moon cross-section, hence their name.
<bibRefCitationid="26388FE559EAB3F4626503A1B54AEC15"author="Mjoeberg, E"journalOrPublisher="Albert Bonnier Foerlag, Stockholm"pageId="0"pageNumber="109"refId="B119"refString="Mjoeberg, E, 1915. Blanc Vildy Djur och Folk i Australian. Albert Bonnier Foerlag, Stockholm"title="Blanc Vildy Djur och Folk i Australian."year="1915">
<bibRefCitationid="67B0C0A2FBF1D25E6D8420CD7D73A8B5"author="Musgrave, A"journalOrPublisher="Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, Sydney"pageId="0"pageNumber="109"refId="B128"refString="Musgrave, A, 1932. Bibliography of Australian Entomology, 1775-1930. Royal Zoological Society of New South Wales, Sydney"title="Bibliography of Australian Entomology, 1775 - 1930."year="1932">Musgrave 1932</bibRefCitation>
travelled to Australia again in 1912-1913, exploring the Queensland Wet Tropics. From 1920 onwards, he established himself in Indonesia, working as chief of the Zoological Department for the Deli Experimental Station (Medan, Sumatra) from 1919 to 1922, then as curator of the Sarawak State Museum (Borneo) from 1922 to 1924, finally leading an expedition to Central Borneo in 1925-1926.