Futurity

Museum fossils reveal new dolphin-ish reptile

Scientists have identified a new species of tuna-shaped reptiles called ichthyosaurs, one called Hauffiopteryx altera.
beaked head and flipper of dolphin-like reptile fossil

Scientists have identified a new species of tuna-shaped reptiles called ichthyosaurs.

Scientists discovered ichthyosaurs (“fish lizards”), which inhabited Earth’s seas during the Mesozoic Era, in the early 19th century. Similar to the modern-day dolphin, ichthyosaurs underwent profound adaptions to aquatic environments including limbs transformed into flippers, a dorsal fin, and a tail fin.

A meticulous study of all specimens related to Hauffiopteryx typicus, a small two-meter-long species, revealed that a single specimen in Germany was in fact different.

It’s one of the new species, called Hauffiopteryx altera (Latin for “different from”).

“Although the marine ecosystems are generally similar across Europe during this time, we are finding there are some rare and possibly endemic species,” explains Dirley Cortés, a graduate student under the supervision of professor Hans Larsson at McGill University’s Redpath Museum and coauthor of the study in Palaeontologica Electronica.

“This finding will have a lot to say about how these ancient ecosystems functioned.”

The fossils came from the Posidonia Shale, an Early Jurassic geological formation located at the axis of Austria, the Czech Republic, Germany, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and Switzerland.

Quarried for over 200 years, the site has yielded thousands of spectacularly preserved ichthyosaur skeletons ranging between two and more than 10 meters in length (6.5 to 33 feet) and representing seven species. Fossilized soft tissues, stomach contents, and embryos were also discovered.

“We were surprised to discover that this small dolphin-sized specimen, collected decades ago, is a new species,” remarks Erin Maxwell, curator of fossil aquatic vertebrates at the State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart and lead author of the study. “There is quite a lot of diversity still waiting to be discovered in our vast museum collections.”

Source: McGill University

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