Nice try, but maybe it would have helped if you had seen the hint:
Does it look like it has a hard exoskeleton like it’s wearing armor?
Do the visible appendages seem to be jointed? Are there a lot of them?
Is its body segmented?
If you can answer yes to these questions, then you might hypothesize that Sanctacaris was an arthropod.
The now extinct eurypterids were also chelicerates. These ancient "water scorpions" lived in the ocean and grew to gargantuan sizes up to three meters (about 10 feet) long!!
And, in fact, it was!
Its mouth appendages were clearly jointed, and it had a hard exoskeleton and many other characteristics of arthropods.
In fact, Sanctacaris was probably a chelicerate the arthropod group that includes spiders, scorpions, and horseshoe crabs. This group got its start in the Precambrian seas, invaded the land more than 400 million years ago, and still thrives today.