Researchers have found a link between today's eight-legged spiders and an ancient group of arachnids that also possessed tails, according to two studies published in the latest issue of Nature Ecology & Evolution. Four fossils of the tiny crawlers were found largely intact, encased in Burmese amber that were recovered from Myanmar by researchers. The BBC reportsthe "cousin" of the spider — called a Chimerarachne yingi — lived about 100 million years ago during the Cretaceous Period. "We have known for a decade or so that spiders evolved from arachnids that had tails, more than 315 million years ago," Russell Garwood of The University of Manchester, a co-researcher on the study, told the BBC. But, he continued, "We've not found fossils before that showed this, and so finding this now was a huge (but really fantastic) surprise."An abstract of the study says the "new fossil most likely represents the earliest branch of the Araneae, and implies that there was a lineage of tailed spiders that presumably originated in the Palaeozoic and survived at least into the Cretaceous of Southeast Asia."That would mean that the tailed spider lived for about 200 million years side-by-side with spiders, Garwood, said. Experts have not ruled out the possibility that some modern day version of the insect may still exist in the rain forests of Southeast Asia but they are so small and their habitat is so remote, there is no evidence that they continue to live there, in or near tree trunks, as their ancestors did. What makes the fossils so unusual, according to the two teams the leading studies, is that they possess both a tail-like appendage similar to those of other ancient arachnids and multi-segment silk-spinning organs only seen in more modern spiders. And, though it was capable of using its spinnerets to produce silk, it was unlikely to have woven webs. But that's as much as the two teams can agree on. Nature Ecology & Evolution writes: