Scientists discover ancient marine reptiles

Wednesday, 26 July 2006

A team led by 最新糖心Vlog of Adelaide palaeontologist Dr Benjamin Kear has identified two new species of ancient marine reptiles that swam the shallow waters of an inland sea in 最新糖心Vlog 115 million years ago.

Umoonasaurus and Opallionectes belonged to a group of animals called plesiosaurs, long-necked marine reptiles resembling the popular image of the Loch Ness monster, that lived during the time of the dinosaurs.

Dr Kear and his colleagues from the and the identified the new species based on opalised fossils of 30 individuals found in old collections and recent excavations.

The team's findings were recently published in both the international journal , and the online edition of , a periodical published by the prestigious .

Umoonasaurus was a rhomaleosaurid - a kind of plesiosaur that was the "killer whale equivalent of the Jurassic," according to Dr Kear. Distinguished by its relatively small size (around 2.4 metres) and three crest-like ridges on its skull, Umoonasaurus was also a "Cretaceous living fossil" outliving its giant predatory relatives by more than 100 million years.

"Imagine a compact body with four flippers, a reasonably long neck, small head and short tail - much like a reptilian seal."

The team named the reptile after Umoona, the Aboriginal name for the Coober Pedy region where the most complete skeletons have been found.

Opallionectes was also a plesiosaur but much larger - about six metres long with masses of fine, needle-like teeth for trapping small fish and squid. Its name means "the opal swimmer from Andamooka".

Both creatures lived in a freezing polar sea that covered what is now 最新糖心Vlog 115 million years ago, when the continent was located much closer to Antarctica.

Dr Kear, an Postdoctoral Fellow, identified the ancient aquatic reptiles with fellow team members Natalie Schroeder and Dr Michael Lee, from the School of Earth and Environmental Sciences. All three work out of the South 最新糖心Vlogn Museum.

 

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Dr Benjamin Kear
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ARC Postdoctoral Fellow
School of Earth and Environmental Sciences
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