“…In general, modern spider burrows consist of vertical or oblique, simple or branched vertical forms, sometimes with a terminal chamber, in some cases silk lined, and structures atop as trap doors or a turret can be found (e.g., Ractliffe & Fagerstrom, 1980;Bryson, 1939;Hils & Hembree, 2015;Uchman, Vrenozi & Muceku, 2017). Among the burrowing spiders, those of the wolf spiders (Lycosidae) tend to produce a nearly vertical burrow with or without a terminal chamber in flat terrain, whereas many trapdoor spider burrows (families Nemesiidae, Ctenizidae, Antrodiaetidae) are at an oblique angle and located on inclined surfaces (Uchman, Vrenozi & Muceku, 2017). This simple morphology can be comparable to the ichnogenenera Skolithos Hadelman, 1840 or Cylindricum Linck, 1949(Smith et al, 2008Hils & Hembree, 2015;), the Y-shaped forms to Psilonichnus Fürsich, 1981 (Uchman, Vrenozi & Muceku, 2017), and those with a terminal chamber to Macanopsis Macsotay, 1967 (Hasiotis, 2006;Mikuś & Uchman, 2012;Hils & Hembree, 2015;Uchman, Vrenozi & Muceku, 2017).…”