• First side-necked turtle ever discovered

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Tue Jun 13 22:30:34 2023
    First side-necked turtle ever discovered in UK

    Date:
    June 13, 2023
    Source:
    University of Portsmouth
    Summary:
    The first side-necked turtle ever to be found in the UK has been
    discovered by an amateur fossil collector and palaeontologists.


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    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    The first side-necked turtle ever to be found in the UK has been
    discovered by an amateur fossil collector and palaeontologists at the University of Portsmouth.

    The fossil remains are the earliest of a so-called side-necked
    pan-pleurodiran turtle, named as such because they fold their neck into
    their shell sideways when threatened. This does mean they can only see
    out with one eye.

    Originally found on a National Trust beach on the Isle of Wight, the
    turtle fossil is an almost complete shell with cervical, dorsal and
    caudal vertebrae, scapulae, pelvic girdle and appendicular bones. Sadly,
    the skull was missing.

    Lead author, Megan Jacobs, said: "This is an amazing discovery because
    it's the first time this type of turtle has been found in the UK. Even
    more exciting is that we used a new technique of radiometric dating to determine the age of the fossil beyond any doubt. And to top it off, CT scanning revealed all the tiny bones inside. It's really incredible for
    what looks like a rolled beach pebble!" Megan and colleagues dissected minerals from inside the turtle shell and analysed them for uranium
    and lead. By measuring the ratio of lead to radioactive uranium, they established the turtle was from the Lower Cretaceous period, around 127
    million years ago.

    The fossil was originally found on the foreshore at Brook Bay on
    the southwest coast of the Isle of Wight by fossil collector Steve
    Burbridge. This part of the coast is well-known for fossil vertebrates
    that come from the cliff and foreshore exposures of the upper part of
    the famous Isle of Wight fossil beds of the Wessex Formation.

    This is the first time that radiometric dating has been used on a fossil
    from the Wessex formation.

    Megan added: "We've nicknamed the turtle 'Burby' after Steve who very
    kindly donated the specimen to the Dinosaur Isle Museum at Sandown on
    the Isle of Wight." The researchers also used cutting-edge micro CT
    scanning at the University of Portsmouth's Future Technology Centre to
    discern various tiny bones. This advanced imaging technique provided
    invaluable insight into the structure and composition of the turtle's
    shell, without damaging it.

    Steve said: "It's beyond my wildest dreams to have one of my finds
    published. I could never have guessed it was such an incredibly important fossil. It's so wonderful to see all the tiny bones inside too."
    Geologist, Dr Catherine Mottram, from the University of Portsmouth's
    School of the Environment, Geography and Geosciences is one of the
    paper's co-authors.

    She said: "It is exciting that we have been able to use cutting edge radiometric dating techniques to provide absolute constraints for this important sequence for the first time." Other co-authors include Ada'n Pe'rez-Garci'a and Marcos Marti'n-Jime'nez from UNED, Spain, Professor
    David Martill, Andrew Gale and Charles Wood from the University of
    Portsmouth, and Oliver Mattsson from Dinosaur Expeditions.

    The paper is published in the scientific journal Cretaceous Research.

    * RELATED_TOPICS
    o Plants_&_Animals
    # Frogs_and_Reptiles # Evolutionary_Biology # New_Species
    # Animals
    o Fossils_&_Ruins
    # Fossils # Paleontology # Early_Mammals # Dinosaurs
    * RELATED_TERMS
    o Sea_turtle o Paralititan o Richard_Leakey o Homo_antecessor
    o Feathered_dinosaurs o Homo_heidelbergensis o Fossil o
    Petrified_wood

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Portsmouth. Note:
    Content may be edited for style and length.


    ========================================================================== Related Multimedia:
    * Fossil_of_turtle ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Megan L. Jacobs, Ada'n Pe'rez-Garci'a, Marcos Marti'n-Jime'nez,
    Catherine
    M. Mottram, David M. Martill, Andrew S. Gale, Oliver L. Mattsson,
    Charles Wood. A well preserved pan-pleurodiran (Dortokidae) turtle
    from the English Lower Cretaceous and the first radiometric date
    for the Wessex Formation (Hauterivian-Barremian) of the Isle of
    Wight, United Kingdom.

    Cretaceous Research, 2023; 150: 105590 DOI:
    10.1016/j.cretres.2023.105590 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/06/230613190825.htm

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