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Prehistoric sea reptile ‘twice as long as bus’ – BBC News

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  • By Georgina Rannard
  • Science reporter

Image source, Sergey Krasovskiy

Scientists have identified what was probably the largest marine reptile ever to swim in the seas – a creature longer than two, nose-to-nose buses.

The creature lived around 202 million years ago alongside the dinosaurs.

Its fossilised jawbone was found in 2016 by a fossil hunter on a beach in Somerset, UK. In 2020 a father and daughter found another similar jawbone.

Experts now say the fossils are from two giant ichthyosaur reptiles, which could have been 25m long.

“Based on the size of the jawbones – one of them over a meter long and the other two metres long – we can work out that the entire animal would have been about 25m long, about as long as a blue whale,” according to Dr Dean Lomax, a palaeontologist at the University of Bristol, who wrote the scientific paper published on Wednesday.

But he says more evidence, like a complete skull and skeleton, is needed to confirm the exact size of the creature because just a few fragments have been found so far.

The giant ichthyosaur died out in a mass extinction and the ichthyosaurs that lived after that never reached the enormous size again, he said.

The first glimpse of the creature came in 2016 when fossil hunter Paul de la Salle was scouring Somerset beaches. He has collected fossils for 25 years after being inspired by famous fossilist Steve Etches.

Image source, Tony Jolliffe BBC

Image caption, Paul de la Salle and his wife Carol go fossil hunting together

Trawling the beach with his wife Carol, he saw what turned out to be the find of a lifetime – the first known jawbone of this giant, marine reptile.

When he talked to Dean Lomax, they suspected they might be on to a major discovery. They published their findings in 2018.

But they wanted more evidence to understand just how big the creature had been.

“We kept our fingers crossed for more discoveries,” says Dean. In 2020, father and daughter Justin and Ruby Reynolds found what Dean was looking for, 10km down the coast at Blue Anchor.

Image source, Tony Jolliffe/BBC

Image caption, The newly-discovered jawbone fossils (at the top) dwarf the same bones from orca-sized animals (at the bottom)

“I was massively impressed – really, really excited. I knew that right at that point we had a second giant jawbone from one of these massive ichthyosaurs just like Paul’s,” Dean says.

Paul rushed to the beach and helped them uncover more. “I dug through all the thick mud. After about an hour, my shovel hit something solid – and this bone came out perfectly preserved,” he says.

The team, as well as family members, carried on looking for fragments of the second jaw – the last piece was found in 2022.

Image caption, Dean Lomax, Ruby Reynolds, Justin Reynolds and Paul de la Salle with the creature’s fossilised jawbone

The discovery gave them more evidence to estimate its size. Now they have concluded that the huge animal is a new species of ichthyosaur, which they have named Ichthyotitan severnensis, or giant fish lizard of the Severn.

Dean co-wrote the latest scientific paper with Ruby Reynolds – one day he says the specimen she found may even be named Ruby.

Image source, Gabriel Ugueto

The specimen Paul found has been in his garage for three years while the team analysed it. Soon it will go on public display at the Bristol Museum and Art Gallery.

“I will be a bit sad to say cheerio. I’ve come to know it and studied it in such intense detail. But it’s also a relief because I won’t have to worry about it so much,” says Paul.

Dean says the discovery highlights how important amateur fossil collectors are.

“Families and all sorts of people can make amazing discoveries You don’t have to be a world expert. As long as you have that bit of patience and a keen eye, you can make a discovery,” he says.

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