The Borrowdale Volcanic Group of northern England hosts Late Ordovician arthropod trackways that are frequently cited as the earliest unequivocal evidence for animal life on land, and provides a key geological locality for our understanding of global myriapod evolution and terrestrialization. Original fieldwork at the trace fossil site has identified four additional bedding surfaces that yield 121 new trackways at the site (of a total 158 known individuals), and permit better sedimentological and paleoecological contextualization of the trackways. Contrary to published claims, none of the trackways occur in sandstones but are invariably preserved on bedding planes of dacitic tuffs. Trackway morphology comprises either short straight track segments with discernable footprint impressions (Diplichnites), long looping traces suggesting dragging and footprint amalgamation (Diplopodichnus), or transitional forms. Morphometric comparison of the Diplopodichnus with fossil and recent mortichnia (death traces) suggests they record immediate pre-mortem locomotion of dying myriapods, and modern analogue reveals mechanisms by which abundant volcanic ash within the environment would have elevated arthropod mortality rates. Sedimentary structures including wave ripples, bedding sags and detached large-scale ball-and-pillow structures, show that the tuffs were deposited subaqueously. One newly-discovered instance where trackways intermittently traverse 3-5 cm tracts of subaerially-exposed wave-ripple crestlines attests that the tracemakers were capable of surviving out of water over very short distances. However, the low diversity, semi-subaqueous ichnofauna has greater similarity with other Cambrian and Ordovician sites, recording pioneer tracemakers with limited tolerance of subaerial environments, than it does with the oldest preserved fully-terrestrial trace fossil communities from the Silurian and Devonian. TRACKWAYS OF THE BORROWDALE VOLCANIC GROUP The Borrowdale Volcanic Group (BVG) is a 6 km-thick Upper Ordovician (Sandbian-Katian) succession of volcanic and related rocks that crops out in Cumbria, NW England, and which accumulated in an arc setting associated with subduction of the Iapetus Ocean (Barnes et al., 2006). Trace fossils were first discovered within the group by Mitchell (1956, p. 434), who reported "animal-tracks" on bedding planes at Lum Pot; a 150 m-long outcrop along the River Lickle, which exposes a near-continuous 25 m-thick stratigraphic section from the upper BVG (likely within its constituent Wallowbarrow Tuff Formation (Fig. 1; see Appendix)). The trace fossils were later identified as Diplichnites and Diplopodichnus by Johnson et al. (1994), who described them on the basis of 34 trackways on a 1.9 m2 bedding plane at Lum Pot and 3 trackways on the 0.1 m2 surface of a loose clast from Sour Milk Gill, 19 km north of the original locality. Johnson et al. (1994) documented that the trackways occurred in sandstone, which they interpreted as having been deposited in a freshwater lacustrine environment. S...