PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Paleontologists unearth what may be the largest known marine reptile

Paleontologists unearth what may be the largest known marine reptile
2024-04-17
(Press-News.org) The fossilised remains of a second gigantic jawbone measuring more than two metres long has been found on a beach in Somerset, UK.

Experts have identified the bones as belonging to the jaws of a new species of enormous ichthyosaur, a type of prehistoric marine reptile. Estimates suggest the oceanic titan would have been more than 25 metres long.

Father and daughter, Justin and Ruby Reynolds from Braunton, Devon, found the first pieces of the second jawbone to be found in May 2020, while searching for fossils on the beach at Blue Anchor, Somerset. Ruby, then aged 11, found the first chunk of giant bone before searching together for additional pieces.

Realising they had discovered something significant, they contacted leading ichthyosaur expert, Dr Dean Lomax, a palaeontologist at The University of Manchester. Dr Lomax, who is also a 1851 Research Fellow at the University of Bristol, contacted Paul de la Salle, a seasoned fossil collector who had found the first giant jawbone in May 2016 from further along the coast at Lilstock.

Dr Dean Lomax said: “I was amazed by the find. In 2018, my team (including Paul de la Salle) studied and described Paul’s giant jawbone and we had hoped that one day another would come to light. This new specimen is more complete, better preserved, and shows that we now have two of these giant bones - called a surangular - that have a unique shape and structure. I became very excited, to say the least.”

Justin and Ruby, together with Paul, Dr Lomax, and several family members, visited the site to hunt for more pieces of this rare discovery. Over time, the team found additional pieces of the same jaw which fit together perfectly, like a multimillion-year-old jigsaw.

Justin said: “When Ruby and I found the first two pieces we were very excited as we realised that this was something important and unusual. When I found the back part of the jaw, I was thrilled because that is one of the defining parts of Paul's earlier discovery.”

The last piece of bone was recovered in October 2022.

The research team, led by Dr Lomax, revealed that the jaw bones belong to a new species of giant ichthyosaur that would have been about the size of a blue whale. Comparing the two examples of the same bone with the same unique features from the same geologic time zone supports their identifications.

The team have called the new genus and species Ichthyotitan severnensis, meaning “giant fish lizard of the Severn.”

The bones are around 202 million years old, dating to the end of the Triassic Period in a time known as the Rhaetian. During this time, the gigantic ichthyosaurs swam the seas while the dinosaurs walked on land. It was the titans’ final chapter, however—as the story told in the rocks above these fossils record a cataclysm known as the Late Triassic global mass extinction event. After this time, giant ichthyosaurs from the family known as Shastasauridae go extinct. Today, these bones represent the very last of their kind.

Ichthyotitan is not the world’s first giant ichthyosaur, but de la Salles’ and Reynolds’ discoveries are unique among those known to science. These two bones appear roughly 13 million years after their latest geologic relatives, including Shonisaurus sikanniensis from British Columbia, Canada, and Himalayasaurus tibetensis from Tibet, China.

Dr Lomax added: “I was highly impressed that Ruby and Justin correctly identified the discovery as another enormous jawbone from an ichthyosaur. They recognised that it matched the one we described in 2018. I asked them whether they would like to join my team to study and describe this fossil, including naming it. They jumped at the chance. For Ruby, especially, she is now a published scientist who not only found but also helped to name a type of gigantic prehistoric reptile. There are probably not many 15-year-olds who can say that! A Mary Anning in the making, perhaps.”

Ruby said: “It was so cool to discover part of this gigantic ichthyosaur. I am very proud to have played a part in a scientific discovery like this.”

Further examinations of the bones’ internal structures have been carried out by master’s student, Marcello Perillo, from the University of Bonn, Germany. His work confirmed the ichthyosaur origin of the bones and revealed that the animal was still growing at the time of death.

He said: “We could confirm the unique set of histological characters typical of giant ichthyosaur lower jaws: the anomalous periosteal growth of these bones hints at yet to be understood bone developmental strategies, now lost in the deep time, that likely allowed late Triassic ichthyosaurs to reach the known biological limits of vertebrates in terms of size. So much about these giants is still shrouded by mystery, but one fossil at a time we will be able to unravel their secret.”

Concluding the work, Paul de la Salle added: “To think that my discovery in 2016 would spark so much interest in these enormous creatures fills me with joy. When I found the first jawbone, I knew it was something special. To have a second that confirms our findings is incredible. I am overjoyed.”

The new research has been published today in the open access journal PLOS ONE.

Ruby, Justin and Paul’s discoveries will soon go on display at the Bristol Museum and Art Gallery.

Lomax said: “This research has been ongoing for almost eight years. It is quite remarkable to think that gigantic, blue whale-sized ichthyosaurs were swimming in the oceans around what was the UK during the Triassic Period. These jawbones provide tantalising evidence that perhaps one day a complete skull or skeleton of one of these giants might be found. You never know.”

END

[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Paleontologists unearth what may be the largest known marine reptile Paleontologists unearth what may be the largest known marine reptile 2 Paleontologists unearth what may be the largest known marine reptile 3

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Video-assisted hand therapy is effective after thumb arthritis surgery

2024-04-17
Waltham — March 15, 2024 — For patients undergoing carpometacarpal (CMC) joint surgery for treatment of thumb osteoarthritis, the use of online video instruction for postoperative hand therapy is associated with outcomes similar to in-person therapy visits – while substantially reducing travel time and distance, reports a clinical trial in The Journal of Bone & Joint Surgery. The journal is published in the Lippincott portfolio in partnership with Wolters Kluwer.  Video-administered hand therapy provides an "efficient and effective" alternative to in-person therapy after CMC arthroplasty, ...

New butterfly species created 200,000 years ago by two species interbreeding

New butterfly species created 200,000 years ago by two species interbreeding
2024-04-17
Researchers have shown that an Amazonian butterfly is a hybrid species, formed by two other species breeding together almost 200,000 years ago.  The discovery, by an international team led by scientists at the University of York and Harvard University, demonstrates how the formation of new species can be more complex than previously imagined. Species are often thought of as the tips, or leaves in a ‘tree of life’. In this model, new species are produced by the tips splitting over thousands to millions of years.  Scientists now understand, however, that the branches in the tree of life are ...

New class of antimicrobials discovered in soil bacteria

New class of antimicrobials discovered in soil bacteria
2024-04-17
Researchers have discovered toxic protein particles, shaped like umbrellas, that soil bacteria known as Streptomyces secrete to squelch competitors, especially others of their own species. The discovery of the umbrella toxin particles and related information about their structures, composition and mode of action were published April 17 in Nature. The umbrella toxin proteins are the latest example of these bacteria’s varied, combative strikes on their microscopic rivals. The crowded, diverse bacteria communities ...

Substantial global cost of climate inaction

Substantial global cost of climate inaction
2024-04-17
Traditionally, estimates of how climate change will affect global economies have focused on the effects of annual temperature changes. However, the additional impacts of variability and extremes in rainfall and temperature have remained largely unexplored, until now. Using projections from 33 global climate models, an international research team, led by Paul Waidelich at ETH Zurich, conducted a pioneering study, published in the journal, Nature Climate Change, to quantify such impacts on gross domestic product (GDP) across the globe. Revealing the additional ...

Mountain chickadees have remarkable memories. A new study explains why

Mountain chickadees have remarkable memories. A new study explains why
2024-04-17
Lost your keys? Can’t remember where you parked the car? If only you had the memory of a mountain chickadee.  These half-ounce birds, with brains slightly larger than a pea, stash tens of thousands of food items like seeds in tree bark, under dead leaves and inside pinecones across the mountains. When winter arrives, they can recall the exact locations of their caches, a skill that helps them survive the bitter cold and deep snow.    In a new study published April 17 in the journal Current Biology, researchers at the University of Colorado Boulder and the ...

Current police response to intimate partner violence calls for change

2024-04-17
April 17, 2024-- Policing of intimate partner violence (IPV) may result in adverse consequences for survivors, according to a new study at Columbia University Mailman School of Public Health. However, the evidence concerning the generalized consequences of IPV policing has not been comprehensively evaluated until now and the results call into question whether IPV policing benefits survivors. This is the first review on the consequences of IPV policing in the U.S. The findings are published in the journal Aggression and Violent Behavior. IPV, which includes physical violence, sexual violence, psychological abuse, and other forms of coercion between current or former spouses or ...

Understanding climate warming impacts on carbon release from the tundra

Understanding climate warming impacts on carbon release from the tundra
2024-04-17
The warming climate shifts the dynamics of tundra environments and makes them release trapped carbon, according to a new study published in Nature. These changes could transform tundras from carbon sinks into a carbon source, exacerbating the effects of climate change. A team of over 70 scientists from different countries used so called open-top chambers (OTCs) to experimentally simulate the effects of warming on 28 tundra sites around the world. OTCs basically serve as mini-greenhouses, blocking wind and trapping heat to create local warming. The warming experiments led to a 1.4 degrees Celsius increase in air temperature and a 0.4 degrees increase ...

New study examines influence of social media on televised debate viewing

New study examines influence of social media on televised debate viewing
2024-04-17
Anyone who regularly watches news or sports has likely noticed the steady creep of content competing for screen space, whether it be stock market prices, social media posts, game scores or some other graphic display. Previous studies have indicated that high intensity visuals that employ vibrant displays of information tend to hamper both long- and short-term memory.   With that in mind, a new study set out to answer a narrower question: how does the inclusion of social media in the televised presidential primary debates impact the viewer’s experience?  If the purpose of primary debates is to help viewers differentiate between candidates they would ...

Pitt researchers are solving a mini mystery of cell division

2024-04-17
When a single bacterial cell divides into two during periods of rapid growth, it doesn’t split in half once it reaches a predetermined size. Instead, data has shown, a cell will divide once it has added a certain amount of mass. The two processes sound similar, but they each carry different risks. Many researchers believed it was a safer bet for the cell if it split once it reached a certain size. New mathematical modeling from the Kenneth P. Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences shows the risks may have been miscalculated, however, because previous calculations ...

Sink to source: Does what we put into our plumbing end up back in the water supply?

2024-04-17
When you see an advertisement for a detergent promising to brighten your clothes, something called a fluorescent whitening compound, or optical brightener, is probably involved. Such material absorbs UV light and emits visible blue light via fluorescence. The result? Brighter whites, vibrant colors. Yes, your clothes are glowing.   As it turns out, these brighteners can make their way into the water supply. Luka Vucinic, a lecturer and environmental engineer at Glasgow Caledonian University in London, considers the problem of pollutants like fluorescent whitening compounds, microplastics, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Science council: “Tasks excellently fulfilled”

USC-led study introduces a new and improved way to grow the cells that give rise to the kidney’s filtration system

USPSTF recommendation statement on screening for breast cancer

Machine listening: Making speech recognition systems more inclusive

Biodegradable ‘living plastic’ houses bacterial spores that help it break down

Loneliness grows as we age

Listening to mindfulness audios during radiation improves physical, emotional side effects

INSEAD’s research on sustainable circular models among the most influential papers in last 30 years

Quitting smoking during pregnancy may have a positive effect on placental weight

GPT-4, Google Gemini fall short in breast imaging classification

Lung abnormality progression linked to acute respiratory disease in smokers

Innovation promises to prevent power pole-top fires

Citizen scientists help discover record-breaking exoplanet in binary star system

Tambourine Philanthropies commits over $5 million in new funding for research into ALS, in partnership with the Milken Institute

E-bike incentives prove to be worth the investment

Trotting robots reveal emergence of animal gait transitions

Lundquist investigator Dr. Ashraf Ibrahim is the lead author in the landmark study on pioneering oral fungal infection treatment showing promise in preclinical trials

Deep-learning decoding for a noninvasive brain-computer interface

Elucidating the role of a shared lncRNA-miRNA-mRNA network in exacerbating Parkinson’s disease symptoms in the context of COVID-19 infection

American College of Lifestyle Medicine announces unique screening tool for clinicians to efficiently assess patient dietary patterns

Cranberry extracts could boost microbiota and counter cardiometabolic diseases

Discovery of uranium-contaminated soil purification material without secondary environmental pollution

The carbon emissions of academic astronomy

Journal of Pharmaceutical Analysis articles reveal the importance of phytocompounds and metabolomics analysis

Great strides in the development of high refractive index polymers for optoelectronics

Engineered increase in mesophyll conductance improves photosynthetic efficiency in field trial

Unlocking the genetic mysteries behind plant adaptation: New insights into the evolution of a water-saving trait in the pineapple family (bromeliaceae)

Childcare pick-up: a 1-hour window to build healthier eating habits

MD Anderson and Replay announce FDA clearance of IND application for first-in-class PRAME-targeted TCR NK cell therapy for hematological malignancies

Discovery of mechanism plants use to change seed oil could impact industrial, food oils

[Press-News.org] Paleontologists unearth what may be the largest known marine reptile