Yuma Sun

Mystery Nev. fossil site could be ancient maternity ward

- BY MADDIE BURAKOFF ap Science Writer

NEW YORK – Scientists have uncovered new clues about a curious fossil site in Nevada, a graveyard for dozens of giant marine reptiles. Instead of the site of a massive die-off as suspected, it might have been an ancient maternity ward where the creatures came to give birth.

The site is famous for its fossils from giant ichthyosau­rs – reptiles that dominated the ancient seas and could grow up to the size of a school bus. The creatures – the name means fish lizard – were underwater predators with large paddle-shaped flippers and long jaws full of teeth.

Since the ichthyosau­r bones in Nevada were excavated in the 1950s, many paleontolo­gists have investigat­ed how all these creatures could have died together. Now, researcher­s have proposed a different theory in a study published Monday in the journal Current Biology.

“Several lines of evidence all kind of point towards one argument here: That this was a place where giant ichthyosau­rs came to give birth,” said co-author Nicholas Pyenson, curator of fossil marine mammals

at the Smithsonia­n National Museum of Natural History.

Once a tropical sea, the site – part of Nevada’s Berlin-ichthyosau­r State Park – now sits in a dry, dusty landscape near an abandoned mining town, said lead author Randy Irmis, a paleontolo­gist at the University of Utah.

To get a better look at the massive skeletons, which boast vertebrae the size of dinner plates and bones from their flippers as thick

as boulders, researcher­s used 3D scanning to create a detailed digital model, Irmis said.

They identified fossils from at least 37 ichthyosau­rs scattered around the area, dating back about 230 million years. The bones were preserved in different rock layers, suggesting the creatures could have died hundreds of thousands of years apart rather than all at once, Pyenson said.

A major break came when the researcher­s spotted some tiny bones

among the massive adult fossils, and realized they belonged to embryos and newborns, Pyenson said. The researcher­s concluded that the creatures traveled to the site in groups for protection as they gave birth, like today’s marine giants. The fossils are believed to be from the mothers and offspring that died there over the years.

“Finding a place to give birth separated from a place where you might feed is really common in the modern world – among whales, among sharks,” Pyenson said.

Other clues helped rule out some previous explanatio­ns.

Testing the chemicals in the dirt didn’t turn up any signs of volcanic eruptions or huge shifts to the local environmen­t. And the geology showed that the reptiles were preserved on the ocean floor pretty far from the shore – meaning they probably didn’t die in a mass beaching event, Irmis said.

The new study offers a plausible explanatio­n for a site that’s baffled paleontolo­gists for decades, said Dean Lomax, an ichthyosau­r specialist at England’s University of Manchester who was not involved with the research.

The case may not be fully closed yet but the study “really helps to unlock a little bit more about this fascinatin­g site,” Lomax said.

 ?? NEIL KELLEY/VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY VIA AP ?? THIS PHOTO PROVIDED BY NEIL KELLEY shows researcher­s next to an ichthyosau­r skeleton at Nevada’s Berlin-ichthyosau­r State Park in 2015.
NEIL KELLEY/VANDERBILT UNIVERSITY VIA AP THIS PHOTO PROVIDED BY NEIL KELLEY shows researcher­s next to an ichthyosau­r skeleton at Nevada’s Berlin-ichthyosau­r State Park in 2015.
 ?? GABRIEL UGUETO/NMNH VIA AP ?? THIS ILLUSTRATI­ON provided by the Smithsonia­n National Museum of Natural History in December 2022 depicts a group of adult and newly born Triassic shonisauru­s ichthyosau­rs.
GABRIEL UGUETO/NMNH VIA AP THIS ILLUSTRATI­ON provided by the Smithsonia­n National Museum of Natural History in December 2022 depicts a group of adult and newly born Triassic shonisauru­s ichthyosau­rs.

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