Thursday, 25 August 2011

Nessie fossil found?


Oldest Antarctic "Sea Monster" Found
Marine reptile swam warm polar seas 85 million years ago.
Sabrina Valle for National Geographic News
Published August 24, 2011
Fossils from the oldest known Antarctic "sea monster" have been found, a new study says.
The discovery of an 85-million-year-old plesiosaur has pushed back the marine reptile's presence in Antarctica by 15 million years. (See prehistoric sea-monster pictures.)"The fragments we found don't belong to any group registered on the continent before, which indicates a greater diversity of the plesiosaurs in Antarctica than previously suspected," said team leader Alexander Kellner, of the National Museum of Brazil at the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro.Fragments of the vertebrae, head, and flippers suggest the newfound plesiosaur was 20 to 23 feet (6 to 7 meters) long. The bones weren't, however, enough to identify the species of the plesiosaur.Plesiosaurs roamed the seas worldwide between about 205 million to 65 million years ago, reaching the Southern Hemisphere by the mid-Jurassic. The animals had a range of different sizes and features, but mostly shared small heads, long necks, and big bodies. (See a prehistoric time line.)"If the Loch Ness monster ever existed, this would be its best representation," Kellner said.

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