Move
over Nessie, Scotland gets a new prehistoric marine reptile
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[January 12, 2015]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - Scotland has its very own
prehistoric marine reptile - and, no, we're not talking about Nessie,
the mythic Loch Ness monster.
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Scientists have announced the discovery of the fossil remains of a
dolphin-like seagoing reptile on Scotland's Isle of Skye that lived
about 170 million years ago and was about 14 feet (4.3 meters) long.
The creature, named Dearcmhara shawcrossi, is a member of a group
called ichthyosaurs that were among the dominant marine reptiles
when dinosaurs ruled the land. Ichthyosaurs, some of which reached
monstrous proportions rivaling all but the largest of today's
whales, thrived for more than 150 million years until disappearing
about 95 million years ago.
Dearcmhara, a moderate-sized ichthyosaur, swam in warm, shallow seas
during the Jurassic Period, eating fish and squid. Its remains are
incomplete but the shape of a bone in its front flippers suggests it
may have been an especially strong or fast swimmer, the researchers
said.
"It is from Scotland, and is the first uniquely Scottish marine
reptile ever discovered and studied," said University of Edinburgh
paleontologist Steve Brusatte, one of the researchers in the study
published on Monday in the Scottish Journal of Geology.
"Many other marine reptile fossils have been found in Scotland, but
the vast majority of these have disappeared into private collections
or been sold. This new specimen finally breaks the impasse: it was
found by a private collector who did a great thing, donated it to a
museum and worked with scientists," Brusatte added. Amateur fossil
hunter Brian Shawcross found the fossils on a beach in the northern
part of the Isle of Skye in 1959 and donated them in the 1990s,
researchers said. The genus name Dearcmhara (pronounced "jark vara")
is Scottish Gaelic for "marine lizard." The species name honors
Shawcross.
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"It is important to emphasize how grateful we are that Brian donated
the bones he found all those years ago," added paleontologist Neil
Clark of the University of Glasgow's Hunterian Museum, which
received the fossils.
The discovery sheds light on a span of the Jurassic regarded as
nearly a black hole in the marine reptile fossil record, Brusatte
said. Scotland is one of the few places with fossils from that time.
Other fossils indicate Dearcmhara lived alongside members of another
branch of marine reptiles called plesiosaurs, known for long necks
and paddle-like flippers. The elusive Nessie is commonly portrayed
as looking like a plesiosaur.
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington; Editing by Eric Beech)
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