Daily Sabah (Turkey)

Archaeolog­ists discover fossils of Mini Cooper-sized sea turtle

-

SOME 83 million years ago, in the seas that washed the coasts of an archipelag­o that came be known as Europe, there lived one of the largest turtles on record, a reptile the size of small car – a Mini Cooper to be precise – that braved dangerous waters.

Researcher­s on Thursday described remains discovered in northeaste­rn Spain of a turtle named Leviathano­chelys aenigmatic­a that was about 3.7 meters (12 feet) long, weighed a bit under two tons and lived during the Cretaceous Period – the final chapter in the age of dinosaurs. It is Europe’s biggest-known turtle.

It dwarfed today’s largest turtle – the leatherbac­k, which can reach 2 meters long and is known for marathon marine migrations. Leviathano­chelys nearly matched the largest turtle on record – Archelon, which lived roughly 70 million years ago and reached about 4.6 meters long.

“Leviathano­chelys was as long as a Mini Cooper while Archelon was the same size as a Toyota Corolla,” said paleontolo­gist and study co-author Albert Selles of the Institut Catala de Paleontolo­gia (ICP), a research center affiliated with Universita­t Autònoma de Barcelona.

It was good to be the size of a car, considerin­g the hazardous traffic in the ancient Tethys Sea in which Leviathano­chelys swam. Huge marine reptiles with powerful jaws called mosasaurs were the largest predators – some exceeding 15 meters in length. Various sharks and rays as well as long-necked fish-eating marine reptiles called plesiosaur­s also lurked.

“Attacking an animal of the size of Leviathano­chelys possibly only could have been done by large predators in the marine context. At that time, the large marine predators in the European zone were mainly sharks and mosasaurs,” said Oscar Castillo, a student in a master’s degree program in paleontolo­gy at Universita­t Autonoma de Barcelona and lead author of the study published in the journal Scientific Reports.

“During the Cretaceous, there was a tendency in marine turtles to increase their body size. Leviathano­chelys and Archelon might represent the apex of this process. The reason for this increase in body size has been hypothesiz­ed to be predatory pressures, but there might be other factors,” Castillo added.

Other large turtles from Earth’s past include Protostega and Stupendemy­s, both reaching about 4 meters long. Protostega was a Cretaceous sea turtle that lived about 85 million years ago and, like its later cousin Archelon, inhabited the large inland sea that at the time split North America in two. Stupendemy­s prowled the lakes and rivers of northern South America about 7 to 13 million years ago during the Miocene Epoch.

Scientists unearthed the Leviathano­chelys remains near the village of Coll de Nargo in Catalonia’s Alt Urgell county after fossils protruding from the ground were spotted by a hiker in the Southern Pyrenees mountains. To date, they have found parts of the posterior portion of its carapace, or shell, and most of the pelvic girdle, but no skull, tail or limbs.

The fossils indicated that it possessed a smooth carapace similar to leatherbac­k turtles, with the shell itself about 2.35 meters long and 2.2 meters wide. Leviathano­chelys appears built for the open ocean, returning to land only rarely – for instance to lay eggs.

 ?? ?? The excavation site where fossils of the large Cretaceous period sea turtle Leviathano­chelys aenigmatic­a were discovered in Catalonia’s Alt Urgell county, northeaste­rn Spain.
The excavation site where fossils of the large Cretaceous period sea turtle Leviathano­chelys aenigmatic­a were discovered in Catalonia’s Alt Urgell county, northeaste­rn Spain.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Türkiye