Dayton Daily News

An 11-year-old girl’s fossil find is the largest known ocean reptile

- Kate Golembiews­ki

In 1811, a 12-year-old girl named Mary Anning discovered a fossil on the beach near her home in southweste­rn England — the first scientific­ally identified specimen of an ichthyosau­r, a dolphin-like, ocean-dwelling reptile from the time of the dinosaurs. Two centuries later, less than 50 miles away, an 11-year-old girl named Ruby Reynolds found a fossil from another ichthyosau­r. It appears to be the largest marine reptile known to science.

Reynolds, now 15, and her father, Justin Reynolds, have been fossil hunting for 12 years near their home in Braunton, England. On a family outing in May 2020 to the village of Blue Anchor along the estuary of the River Severn, they came across a piece of fossilized bone set on a rock.

“We were both excited as we had never found a piece of fossilized bone as big as this before,” Justin Reynolds said. His daughter kept searching the beach, he added, “and it wasn’t long before she found another much larger piece of bone.”

They took home the fragments of bone, the largest of which was about 8 inches long, and began their research. A 2018 paper provided a hint at what they’d found: In nearby Lilstock, fossil hunters had discovered similar bone fragments, hypothesiz­ed to be part of the jaw bone of a massive ichthyosau­r that lived roughly 202 million years ago. However, the scientists who’d worked on the Lilstock fossil had deemed that specimen too incomplete to designate a new species.

Justin Reynolds contacted those researcher­s: Dean Lomax, at the University of Bristol, and Paul de la Salle, an amateur fossil collector. They joined the Reynolds family on collecting trips in Blue Anchor, digging in the mud with shovels. Ultimately, they found roughly half of a bone that they estimate would have been more than 7 feet long when complete.

Features of the bone’s shape indicate that it came from an ichthyosau­r’s jaw. To further confirm its identity, the researcher­s collaborat­ed with Marcello Perillo, a paleontolo­gist with the University of Bonn in Germany. Under a microscope, he found crisscross­ed collagen fibers, an ichthyosau­r trait. He also saw that despite the giant size of the jaw bone, the reptile hadn’t finished growing when it died.

Taken together, the fossils from Blue Anchor and Lilstock offered evidence of something special.

“Having two examples of the same bone that preserved all the same unique features, from the same geologic time zone, supported the identifica­tion that we’ve kind of toyed around with before, that it’s got to be something new,” Lomax said. “That’s when it got really exciting.”

He and his co-authors of a paper describing the fossil in the journal PLOS One last month named it Ichthyotit­an severnensi­s, the giant fish lizard of the Severn.

Their estimates suggest Ichthyotit­an could have been up to 82 feet long, rivaling the size of a blue whale and making it the largest marine reptile known to science. It lived right before a massive extinction that ended the Triassic Period.

“Inevitably with big extinction events of course, it’s the big things that go first, and so in this case, literally the biggest things in the ocean, they are wiped out, and this entire family disappears,” Lomax said.

Erin Maxwell, a paleontolo­gist at the State Museum of Natural History, Stuttgart in Germany who was not involved with the study, said that the find sheds light on ichthyosau­r evolution. “Before, there were hints that there were these giant ichthyosau­rs approachin­g the Triassic-Jurassic boundary, but the amount of evidence is becoming incontrove­rtible at this point,” she said.

 ?? LOMAX ET AL., PLOS ONE ?? Dean Lomax, Ruby Reynolds, Justin Reynolds and Paul de la Salle in 2020 with jawbone fragments of an ichthyosau­r. which appears to be the largest marine reptile known to science.
LOMAX ET AL., PLOS ONE Dean Lomax, Ruby Reynolds, Justin Reynolds and Paul de la Salle in 2020 with jawbone fragments of an ichthyosau­r. which appears to be the largest marine reptile known to science.

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