Artist's interpretation of the monster catching a pterosaur
Artist's interpretation of the monster catching a pterosaur. (c) Tor Sponga, BT, Natural History Museum, University of Oslo
Lena Kristiansen - preparation of specimens in the Natural History Museum, University of Oslo
Lena Kristiansen - preparation of specimens in the Natural History Museum, University of Oslo. (c) Natural History Museum, University of Oslo
Where am I? > Home > News > Geology and palaeontology

Monster Jurassic marine reptile discovered

Science Centric | 5 March 2008 14:52 GMT
Printable version A clip for your blog or website E-mail the story to a friend
Bookmark or share the story on your social network Vote for this article Leave a comment Decrease text size Increase text size

University of Alaska Museum of the North earth sciences curator Patrick Druckenmiller spent several weeks last summer working with a Norwegian research team to excavate a large pliosaur specimen in the remote Norwegian archipelago of Svalbard. At the time, they knew the Jurassic fossil was significant.

After months of preparing and conserving the specimen at the Natural History Museum at the University of Oslo, researchers confirmed their earlier suspicions: the 150-million-year-old Jurassic marine reptile is perhaps the largest ever found.

A pliosaur is a type of plesiosaur, a group of extinct reptiles that lived in the world's oceans 205-65 million years ago. Pliosaurs are characterised by tear-drop shaped bodies with two pairs of powerful flippers used to propel them through the water. They were top predators during their day, preying upon fish, squid-like animals and other marine reptiles. They averaged 16-20 feet in length with flippers 3-4 feet long. One of the largest known pliosaurs, the Australian Kronosaurus, measures 33-36 feet long with 6-foot-long flippers. By comparison, the Svalbard specimen, nicknamed 'The Monster' by the research team, is estimated to be 50 feet long with 10-foot-long flippers.

'This is one of the largest and relatively complete plesiosaur specimens ever found,' says Druckenmiller, whose research focuses on plesiosaurs. 'Its discovery in Svalbard also demonstrates that these gigantic animals inhabited the northern seas during the age of dinosaurs.'

Led by Norwegian palaeontologist Jorn Hurum, the international research team, including Druckenmiller, discovered the specimen in summer 2006. Judging from the fragments they recovered at the time, they knew the find was significant and returned the next year to retrieve more of the specimen. During the three-week field season in summer 2007, the team excavated the specimen from the surrounding shale, removing several tons of rock by hand in the process. Though they didn't find the entire skeleton, they recovered several critical parts used to identify the specimen and compare it to other known plesiosaurs: portions of the skull, including the teeth; much of the neck and back; the shoulder girdle; and a near-complete forelimb. One of the key questions researchers hope to answer is whether this specimen represents a species new to science.

In addition to 'The Monster' pliosaur specimen, the crew also discovered parts of three other marine reptiles nearby: a long-necked plesiosaur, an ichthyosaur and another pliosaur. Based in part on these discoveries and several others made by the team, scientists now recognise Svalbard as home to one of the richest accumulations of marine reptile fossils in the world.

'The scientific value of such a large locality with unknown species of marine reptiles is just staggering,' says Hurum. Druckenmiller will join Hurum and the Oslo team on another research expedition to Svalbard in August 2008.

Source: University of Alaska Fairbanks

Magnified cross section of the shaft of one of the lower leg bones of Beishanlong, revealing growth lines. According to Greg Erickson, who undertook the age analysis, 'Growth line counts revealed that the animal perished during its 14th year of life. Although it is hard to fathom, this giant was still actively growing when it died. Growth line spacing in the bones of the teen-giant show only moderate decreases in width towards the periphery. Somewhere out there are even larger specimens awaiting discovery', (c) G. EricksonField Museum palaeontologist leads study on two new dinosaurs from China

— 22 April 2009

During the summers of 2006 and 2007, an international team of researchers from China and the United States excavated a treasure trove of dinosaur skeletons from Early Cretaceous rocks... — full story

Artist's restoration of Guiyu oneiros, (c) Brian Choo, Victoria MuseumThe earliest known well-preserved bony fish found in China

— 25 March 2009

A discovery of an exceptionally preserved primitive fish from the Ludlow of Yunnan, China is featured in the most recent issue (26 March 2009) of Nature. The fossil represents the oldest... — full story

Professor Paul Sereno holds a plaque cast of two juvenile skeletons of the ostrich-mimic dinosaur Sinornithomimus that died when they were a little over one year in age. In their ribcages are stomach stones and the carbonised remains of their last plants they consumed, (c) Mike Hettwer, courtesy of Project ExplorationYoung dinosaurs roamed together, died together

— 21 March 2009

A herd of young birdlike dinosaurs met their death on the muddy margins of a lake some 90 million years ago, according to a team of Chinese and American palaeontologists that excavated... — full story

This is an artists' illustration of Hesperonychus elizabethae by University of Calgary paleontologist Nick Longrich, (c) Nick LongrichMini dinosaurs prowled North America

— 21 March 2009

Massive predators like Albertosaurus and Tyrannosaurus rex may have been at the top of the food chain, but they were not the only meat-eating dinosaurs to roam North America, according... — full story


Popular tags in Geology and palaeontology: dinosaurs · earthquake · fossil · volcano