The Borneo Post

Scientists discover ‘fish lizard’ fossil in India

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AHMEDABAD, India: Indian scientists said yesterday they had identified a prehistori­c marine reptile fossil discovered in a western desert region known as the subcontine­nt’s Jurassic Park.

The 150-million-year-old marine reptile known as ‘ichthyosau­r’ is the first of its kind found in India and was unearthed by a team of local and German geologists.

The 5.5-metre specimen was uncovered in the Kutch desert in Gujarat in January 2016, but scientists took more than a year to identify the rare fossil.

The ichthyosau­r – a combinatio­n of two Greek words meaning fish and lizard – existed during the Mesozoic Era upwards of 250 million years ago when dinosaurs roamed the earth.

“The fossil was studied for over a year and it turned out to be of ichthyosau­r, a kind of marine reptile which could have resembled the present day dolphins,” said M G Thakkar, one of the authors of the study.

“This is the first of its kind fossil to be found in India,” Thakkar told AFP, adding the fossil was likely to be 150 million-years- old.

Similar specimens have been discovered in the Americas, Australia and Europe.

Gujarat is home to one of the world’s largest known deposits of dinosaur remains, and is colloquial­ly dubbed India’s Jurassic Park after the popular Hollywood film.

In 2003, a National Geographic team discovered a new dinosaur species in the western state after studying fossils found scattered along the Narmada River.

The dinosaur – a 30- foot-long, carnivorou­s, stocky animal with an unusual crested head – was named ‘Rajasaurus Narmadensi­s’ meaning the regal reptile from Narmada. — AFP

 ??  ?? An excavated ichthyosau­r skeleton near Lodai village in the Kutch district of Gujarat state in western India. — AFP photo
An excavated ichthyosau­r skeleton near Lodai village in the Kutch district of Gujarat state in western India. — AFP photo

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