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Giant tooth of ancient marine reptile discovered high in Swiss Alps

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The fossils of three ichthyosau­rs – giant marine reptiles that patrolled primordial oceans – have been discovered high up in the Swiss Alps, and include the largest ever tooth found for the species, a study said on Thursday.

With elongated bodies and small heads, the prehistori­c leviathans weighed up to 80 metric tonnes (88 US tonnes) and grew to 20 metres (yards), making them among the largest animals to have ever lived.

They first appeared 250 million years ago in the early Triassic, and a smaller, dolphin-like subtype survived until 90 million years ago. But the gigantic ichthyosau­rs, which comprised most of the species, died out 200 million years ago.

Unlike dinosaurs, ichthyosau­rs barely left a trace of fossil remains, and "why that is remains a great mystery to this day," said Martin Sander of the University of Bonn, lead author of the paper in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontolo­gy.

The specimens in question, dated to 205 million years ago in the study, were unearthed between 1976 and 1990 during geological surveys, but were only recently analysed in detail.

They were discovered at an altitude of 2,800 metres (9,100 feet).

During their lifetimes the three swam in waters around the superconti­nent Pangea – but due to plate tectonics and the folding of the Alps, the fossils kept rising.

Ichthyosau­rs were previously thought to have only inhabited the deep ocean, but the rocks from which the new fossils derive are believed to have been at the bottom of a shallow coastal area. It could be that some of the giants followed schools of fish there.

There are two sets of skeletal remains. One consists of ten rib fragments and a vertebra, suggesting an animal some 20 meters long, which is more or less equivalent to the largest ichthyosau­r to have been found, in Canada.

The second animal measured 15 metres, according to an estimate from the seven vertebrae found.

"From our point of view, however, the tooth is particular­ly exciting," explained Sander.

"Because this is huge by ichthyosau­r standards: Its root was 60 millimeter­s in diametre - the largest specimen still in a complete skull to date was 20 millimetre­s and came from an ichthyosau­r that was nearly 18 metres long."

Its root was 60 millimeter­s in diametre - the largest specimen still in a complete skull to date was 20 millimetre­s and came from an ichthyosau­r that was nearly 18 metres long."

Martin Sander, University of Bonn

While this could indicate a beast of epic proportion­s, it's more likely to have come from an ichthyosau­r with particular­ly gigantic teeth, rather than a particular­ly gigantic ichthyosau­r.

Current research holds that extreme gigantism is incompatib­le with a predatory lifestyle requiring teeth.

That's why the largest known animal to have ever lived – the blue whale at 30 metres long and 150 tons – lacks teeth.

Blue whales are filter feeders, while the much smaller sperm whales, at 20 metres long and 50 tons, are hunters, and use more of their energy to fuel their muscles.

 ?? AFP/VNA Photo ?? TOOTH FOUND: The root of the thickest ichthyosau­r tooth found so far.
AFP/VNA Photo TOOTH FOUND: The root of the thickest ichthyosau­r tooth found so far.

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