Prehistoric crocodile in ‘kitchen counters’
Fossils found in limestone slabs once destined for
Italian homes:
Ker Than
Fossils of a new species of ancient crocodile cousin have been found
in limestone once destined for Italian kitchen countertops, a new study
says.
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A scientist shows the fossilized limestone next to a head model
of the prehistoric crocodile. Picture courtesy Federico Borella |
The fossils were originally discovered in a limestone quarry in
Ferrara, Italy, in 1955 after workers sliced a huge block into four
slabs and found the bones trapped inside.
“When the owner noticed the bones, he decided to save” the slabs,
study co-author and geologist at the Museo Geologico Giovanni Capellini
in Italy Federico Fanti siad.
Scientists performed only a cursory examination of the fossils -
enough to determine that they belonged to an ancient crocodile - before
the slabs were transferred to two museums in Italy.
The fossils sat unstudied until 2009, when scientists decided to
examine them again in more detail.
Analysis of the embedded bones revealed a skull and a few vertebrae
that belonged to a previously unknown species of 165-million-year-old
prehistoric reptile now named Neptunidraco ammoniticus.
The newfound creature turned out to be the oldest known member of
Metriorhynchidae, a family of ancient marine crocodiles that roamed
Earth’s oceans for about 30 million years before dying out.
New croc more like dolphin
Scientists think Metriorhynchids split with the ancestors of modern
crocodiles about 200 million years ago.
Unlike modern crocodiles, which have semi-aquatic lifestyles,
scientists think N. ammoniticus was a fully marine predator that came on
land rarely, if ever.
The 13-foot (4-meter) animal was comparable in size to modern
crocodiles, but had a more streamlined skull, a more hydrodynamic body,
and a vertical tail that more closely resembled those of fish or sharks.
Based on previous fossil finds of other Metriorhynchids species, the
scientists also suspect N. ammoniticus had flippers.
“It was so adapted to living in the sea that it was unable to survive
outside water. In some general aspects, it was more like a dolphin than
a croc,” study co-author and a paleontologist at Italy’s University of
Bologna, Andrea Cau said. However, for all of their aquatic adaptations,
N. ammoniticus and other marine crocodile species did not cut off ties
with the surface world completely, Cau noted. Like whales and dolphins,
they had to swim to the ocean surface to breathe, and like sea turtles,
they may have clambered up onto beaches once a year to lay their eggs.
Though fearsome by modern standards, N. ammoniticus was also not an
alpha predator among its ancient marine counterparts. For instance, the
crocodile cousin was dwarfed by top ocean predators such as the
short-necked plesiosaur Liopleurodon, which could grow to more than 80
feet (25 meters).
Marine crocodiles successful - to a point
Fossils of Metriorhynchids have been found all over the world,
suggesting they roamed widely across ancient Earth’s oceans.
Based on the size and shape of their teeth, scientists think
Metriorhynchids such as N. ammoniticus dined on fish and squid and
perhaps other sea reptiles.
But N. ammoniticus is the only crocodile cousin that is known to have
lived in the ancient Tethys Ocean, which was located north of the
supercontinent Gondwana and is now part of modern-day Italy.
Their presence in Tethys suggests Metriorhynchids were “even more
successful” than previously thought, added study co-author Fanti, whose
research appears in an upcoming issue of the journal Gondwana Research.
Despite this, the group did not survive, Fanti noted. “They tried to
colonize a marine world and survive with what the sea provided, but they
failed,” he said. “Their (terrestrial) cousins have fared much better.”
Crocodile discovery ‘exciting’
Mark Young, a paleontologist at the University of Edinburgh in the
United Kingdom, said the discovery of N. ammoniticus offers “an exciting
insight into the early evolution” of Metriorhynchids.
For instance, the new species “tells us Metriorhynchids evolved and
diversified far earlier than previously thought,” said Young, who was
not involved in the study.
The fossils also support the idea that during the age of the
dinosaurs, crocodile ancestors “were exceptionally diverse,” Young added
in an email.
Besides fully marine crocodiles such as Metriorhynchids, there were
also terrestrial crocodiles with mammal-like teeth that later evolved
into plant-eating reptiles.
There were also crocodiles that ate both meat and plants, and huge
semi-aquatic crocodiles that could take down dinosaurs.
Study co-author Fanti added there may be more fossil gems like N.
ammoniticus hidden in museums across Europe. “This is one specimen in
our museum, and we have one million specimens,” Fanti said. “So the
potential ([for new discoveries) is huge.”
National Geographic News |