Scottish fossil of flying reptile leaves scientists 'gobsmacked'
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[February 22, 2022]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - A fossil jawbone peeking out
from a limestone seashore on Scotland's Isle of Skye led scientists to
discover the skeleton of a pterosaur that showed that these remarkable
flying reptiles got big tens of millions of years earlier than
previously known.
Researchers said on Tuesday this pterosaur, named Dearc sgiathanach,
lived roughly 170 million years ago during the Jurassic Period, soaring
over lagoons in a subtropical landscape and catching fish and squid with
crisscrossing teeth perfect for snaring slippery prey.
Its scientific name, pronounced "jark ski-an-ach," means "winged
reptile" in Gaelic.
With a wingspan of about 8 feet (2.5 meters), Dearc was the Jurassic's
largest-known pterosaur and the biggest flying creature that had
inhabited Earth to that point in time. Some pterosaurs during the
subsequent Cretaceous Period achieved much greater dimensions - as big
as fighter jets. But Dearc shows that this scaling up had its origins
much earlier.
A forensic analysis of its bones indicated this Dearc individual was not
fully grown and could have had a 10-foot (3-meter) wingspan as an adult.
Dearc weighed very little - probably below 22 pounds (10 kg) - thanks to
its hollow, lightweight bones and slender structure, said University of
Edinburgh paleontology doctoral student Natalia Jagielska, lead author
of the research published in the journal Current Biology.
It had an elongated skull and a long, stiff tail. An arsenal of sharp
teeth formed a cage when it bit down on prey.
Pterosaurs, which lived alongside the dinosaurs, were the first of three
vertebrate groups to achieve powered flight, appearing about 230 million
years ago. Birds appeared about 150 million years ago and bats around 50
million years ago.
Pterosaurs are some of the rarest vertebrates in the fossil record owing
to their fragile bones, some with walls thinner than a sheet of paper.
"Our specimen, anomalously, is well preserved - retaining its original
three dimensions and being almost complete, and still articulated as it
would be when alive. Such state of preservation is exceptionally rare in
pterosaurs," Jagielska said.
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University of Edinburgh paleontologist Steve Brusatte works to
conserve part of the fossil of a newly identified Jurassic Period
flying reptile, or pterosaur, called 'Dearc sgiathanach', found on a
rocky beach at Scotland's Isle of Skye, Britain in this handout
image from May 2017. Shasta Marrero/Handout via REUTERS
Up until when Dearc lived,
pterosaurs generally had been modest in size, many about the size of
a seagull. The prevailing wisdom among scientists had been that
pterosaurs did not reach Dearc's size until the Cretaceous, some 25
million years later, with the appearance of creatures like
Huanhepterus, Feilongus and Elanodactylus. Quetzalcoatlus, appearing
about 68 million years ago, boasted a wingspan of about 36 feet (11
meters), like an F-16 fighter.
"In the Cretaceous, some pterosaurs got enormous. These were some of
the most superlative animals that ever lived. Dearc was not close to
them in size or grandeur, but it was 100 million years older.
Evolution needed time to make such giants," University of Edinburgh
paleontologist and study co-author Steve Brusatte said.
"One idea is that pterosaurs only got larger after birds evolved,
when the two groups were competing with each other for the aerial
niches. But Dearc tells us that pterosaurs already got to be the
size of today's largest birds even before the first birds evolved,
so it throws a wrench into this idea," Brusatte added.
In Dearc's time, Britain was closer to the equator and existed as a
series of smaller separate islands. Dearc lived alongside a
menagerie of plant-eating and meat-eating dinosaurs, early mammals
and marine reptiles.
Dearc was discovered in 2017, with the fossil jutting out from a
limestone intertidal zone after the tide had gone down.
"We were gobsmacked," Brusatte said. "Nothing like this had ever
been found in Scotland."
They battled the tide, first using hammers and chisels and then
diamond-tipped saws. But the tide interrupted before the skeleton
could be fully extracted.
"The tide came in with a vengeance, and we cried as the waves lapped
over the fossil," Brusatte said. "We thought we lost it. But we
decided to come back around midnight when the tide was down again,
using our headlamps and flashlights. We were shocked and relieved to
see the bones still there as the waves receded."
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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