Stunning Jurassic 'Sea Monster' Found in India | National Geographic


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Discovery

A well-preserved ichthyosaur skeleton was unearthed in India after 1,500 man-hours of excavation. The fossil is significant due to its completeness and its origin from the Jurassic period—the first such discovery in India.

Significance

The find is unprecedented in India; previous ichthyosaur discoveries consisted of isolated teeth or poorly preserved vertebrae. This complete skeleton offers valuable information about these marine reptiles.

Diet

The ichthyosaur's worn teeth suggest a diet of tough prey like armored fish and ammonites.

Global Distribution

The discovery strengthens the evidence of global distribution among ichthyosaurs, indicating connections with similar species found in more northern regions.

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After 1,500 man-hours of digging, the team unearthed the stunningly preserved skeleton. The ichthyosaur’s backbone was still in more or less a continuous line, and its left forefin kept the shape it had in life. (Find out about a baby sea monster fossil that was found preserved inside its mother.)

Guntupalli V.R. Prasad, a paleontologist with India’s University of Delhi who studies dinosaur-era vertebrates, says that the find came as a surprise. “I did not do much research on the vertebrate fossils of this region earlier, as it was considered to yield very few vertebrate fossils,” he says.

Prasad quickly realized the magnitude of the find. Not only is the fossil the most complete Indian ichthyosaur ever found, it’s also the first from the Jurassic period recovered in the country. All previous finds are about 50 million years younger and consist only of isolated teeth or poorly preserved vertebrae, Prasad says.

Tough Prey

When the ichthyosaur lived, this region of India was covered by a tropical sea, which the 16-foot-long reptile prowled for its meals. Its cracked, worn teeth imply that it was eating tough prey such as armored fish and ammonites, spiral-shelled mollusks that resembled today’s nautiluses.

The team also found that the Indian ichthyosaur is closely related to group members found farther north—evidence of sea monster globalization.

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