Gigantic marine reptile's fossils found by British girl and father
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[April 18, 2024]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - A fossil jawbone found by a British girl and her father on a
beach in Somerset, England belongs to a gigantic marine reptile dating
to 202 million years ago that appears to have been among the largest
animals ever on Earth.
Researchers said on Wednesday the bone, called a surangular, was from a
type of ocean-going reptile called an ichthyosaur. Based on its
dimensions compared to the same bone in closely related ichthyosaurs,
the researchers estimated that the Triassic Period creature, which they
named Ichthyotitan severnensis, was between 72 and 85 feet (22-26
meters) long.
That would make it perhaps the largest-known marine reptile and would
rival some of the largest baleen whales alive today. The blue whale,
considered the largest animal ever on the planet, can reach about 100
feet (30 meters) long.
Marine reptiles ruled the world's oceans when dinosaurs dominated the
land. Ichthyosaurs, which evolved from terrestrial ancestors and
prospered for about 160 million years before disappearing roughly 90
million years ago, came in various sizes and shapes, eating fish, squid
relatives and other marine reptiles and giving birth to live young.
Ichthyotitan is known only from two jawbones, the one found by Ruby
Reynolds and her father Justin Reynolds in 2020 at Blue Anchor,
Somerset, and another from a different Ichthyotitan individual found in
2016, along the Somerset coast at Lilstock.
"It is quite remarkable to think that gigantic, blue whale-sized
ichthyosaurs were swimming in the oceans around the time that dinosaurs
were walking on land in what is now the UK during the Triassic Period,"
said paleontologist Dean Lomax, affiliated with the University of
Manchester and University of Bristol, lead author of the study published
in the journal PLOS ONE.
Ruby Reynolds, who was 11 at the time and is now 15, was fossil hunting
on the beach with her father when they spotted a piece of the surangular.
Ruby continued to search the area and found a second piece - much larger
than the first - partly buried in a mud slope. They subsequently
contacted Lomax, an ichthyosaur expert, and additional sections of the
bone were unearthed.
The role of Ruby Reynolds in the discovery has led to comparisons with
Mary Anning, the 19th century British fossil hunter and anatomist who,
among other things, discovered ichthyosaur fossils when she was 12.
"I think Mary Anning was an incredible paleontologist and it's amazing
to be compared to her," Ruby Reynolds said.
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The washed-up carcass of a Ichthyotitan severnensis, a newly
identified species of marine reptile that lived 202 million years
ago based on fossils discovered at Somerset, England, lies on a
shore in this illustration obtained by Reuters on April 16, 2024.
Sergey Krasovskiy/Handout via REUTERS
"It has been an amazing, enlightening and fun experience to work
with these experts, and we are proud to be part of the team and
co-authors of a scientific paper which names a new species and
genus," Justin Reynolds added.
Fossil collector Paul de la Salle found the 2016 remains now
attributed to Ichthyotitan.
Ichthyotitan's sheer size was awe-inspiring.
"Discoveries like this create incredible moments where we become
humbled at our size and place in the world. To learn that an animal
of this magnitude once swam our oceans, felt the same warmth of the
sun, and breathed our air, and then vanished gives us an opportunity
to see how important each species is to the fragile-yet-resilient
fabric of life," Florida-based paleontologist and study co-author
Jimmy Waldron said.
Ichthyotitan was a member of a family of giant ichthyosaurs called
shastasauridae, and lived 13 million years later than any of the
others known to date, suggesting these behemoths survived until a
global mass extinction event that doomed numerous types of animals
about 201 million years ago at the end of the Triassic.
No fossils of the rest of Ichthyotitan's skeleton have been
discovered, but the researchers have been able to discern its
appearance based on other members of its family including
Shonisaurus from British Columbia, Canada.
The surangular is a long, curved bone at the top of the lower jaw,
just behind the teeth, present in nearly every vertebrate living or
extinct, apart from mammals. Muscles attached to this bone generate
bite force.
"In T-rex, the surangular measures over half a meter (1-1/2 feet) in
length. The surangular Ruby and her father found stretched more than
two meters (7 feet). This translates to not only the scope of how
truly enormous the animal was, but gives us an indication that it
had a lot of boost behind its bite," said Waldron, who founded the
Dinosaurs Will Always Be Awesome mobile dinosaur museum.
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington; Additional reporting by
Matthew Stock; Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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