• Fossil of mosasaur with bizarre 'screwdr

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Thu May 18 22:30:22 2023
    Fossil of mosasaur with bizarre 'screwdriver teeth' found in Morocco


    Date:
    May 18, 2023
    Source:
    University of Bath
    Summary:
    Scientists have discovered a new species of mosasaur, a sea-dwelling
    lizard from the age of the dinosaurs, with strange, ridged teeth
    unlike those of any known reptile. Along with other recent finds
    from Africa, it suggests that mosasaurs and other marine reptiles
    were evolving rapidly up until 66 million years ago, when they were
    wiped out by an asteroid along with the dinosaurs and around 90%
    of all species on Earth.


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    FULL STORY ========================================================================== Scientists have discovered a new species of mosasaur, a sea-dwelling
    lizard from the age of the dinosaurs, with strange, ridged teeth unlike
    those of any known reptile. Along with other recent finds from Africa, it suggests that mosasaurs and other marine reptiles were evolving rapidly
    up until 66 million years ago, when they were wiped out by an asteroid
    along with the dinosaurs and around 90% of all species on Earth.

    The new species, Stelladens mysteriosus, comes from the Late Cretaceous
    of Morocco and was around twice the size of a dolphin.

    It had a unique tooth arrangement with blade-like ridges running down
    the teeth, arranged in a star-shaped pattern, reminiscent of a cross-head screwdriver.

    Most mosasaurs had two bladelike, serrated ridges on the front and back
    of the tooth to help cut prey, however Stelladens had anywhere from four
    to six of these blades running down the tooth.

    "It's a surprise," said Dr Nick Longrich from the Milner Centre for
    Evolution at the University of Bath, who led the study. "It's not like
    any mosasaur, or any reptile, even any vertebrate we've seen before."
    Dr Nathalie Bardet, a marine reptile specialist from the Museum of
    Natural History in Paris, said: "I've worked on the mosasaurs of Morocco
    for more than 20 years, and I'd never seen anything like this before --
    I was both perplexed and amazed!" That several teeth were found with
    the same shape suggests their strange shape was not the result of a
    pathology or a mutation.

    The unique teeth suggest a specialised feeding strategy, or a specialised
    diet, but it remains unclear just what Stelladens ate.

    Dr Longrich said: "We have no idea what this animal was eating, because
    we don't know of anything similar either alive today, or from the
    fossil record.

    "It's possible it found a unique way to feed, or maybe it was filling
    an ecological niche that simply doesn't exist today. The teeth look like
    the tip of a Phillips-head screwdriver, or maybe a hex wrench.

    "So what's it eating? Phillips head screws? IKEA furniture? Who knows."
    The teeth were small, but stout and with wear on the tips, which seemed
    to rule out soft-bodied prey. The teeth weren't strong enough to crush
    heavily armoured animals like clams or sea urchins, however.

    "That might seem to suggest it's eating something small, and lightly
    armoured - - thin-shelled ammonites, crustaceans, or bony fish -- but
    it's hard to know," said Longrich. "There were weird animals living
    in the Cretaceous- ammonites, belemnites, baculites -- that no longer
    exist. It's possible this mosasaur ate something, and occupied a niche,
    that simply doesn't exist anymore, and that might explain why nothing
    like this is ever seen again.

    "Evolution isn't always predictable. Sometimes it goes off in a unique direction, and something evolves that's never been seen before, and
    then it never evolves again." The mosasaurs lived alongside dinosaurs
    but weren't dinosaurs. Instead, they were giant lizards, relatives of
    Komodo dragons, snakes, and iguanas, adapted for a life at sea.

    Mosasaurs evolved around 100 million years ago, and diversified up to
    66 million years ago, when a giant asteroid hit the Yucatan Peninsula
    in Mexico, plunging the world into darkness.

    Although scientists have debated the role of environmental changes
    towards the end of the Cretaceous in the extinction, Stelladens, along
    with recent discoveries from of Morocco, suggests that mosasaurs were
    evolving rapidly up to the very end -- they went out at their peak,
    rather than fading away.

    The new study shows that even after years of work in the Cretaceous of
    Morocco, new species are continuing to be discovered. The reason may be
    that most species are rare.

    The authors of the study predict that in a very diverse ecosystem,
    it may take decades to find all of the rare species.

    "We're not even close to finding everything in these beds," said Longrich, "This is the third new species to appear, just this year. The amount of diversity at the end of the Cretaceous is just staggering." Nour-Eddine
    Jalil, a professor at the Natural History Museum and a researcher at
    Univers Cadi Ayyad in Morocco, said: "The fauna has produced an incredible number of surprises -- mosasaurs with teeth arranged like a saw, a
    turtle with a snout in the form of snorkel, a multitude of vertebrates
    of various shapes and sizes, and now a mosasaur with star-shaped teeth.

    "We would say the works of an artist with an overflowing imagination.

    "Morocco's sites offer an unparalleled picture of the amazing biodiversity
    just before the great crisis of the end of the Cretaceous."
    * RELATED_TOPICS
    o Plants_&_Animals
    # New_Species # Nature # Frogs_and_Reptiles
    o Earth_&_Climate
    # Ecology # Environmental_Awareness # Exotic_Species
    o Fossils_&_Ruins
    # Dinosaurs # Evolution # Fossils
    * RELATED_TERMS
    o Ichthyosaur o Dinosaur o Feathered_dinosaurs o
    Recent_single-origin_hypothesis o Homo_(genus) o Jurassic o
    Homo_heidelbergensis o Timeline_of_evolution

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


    ========================================================================== Related Multimedia:
    * The_teeth_with_strange_ridges ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Nicholas R. Longrich, Nour-Eddine Jalil, Xabier Pereda-Suberbiola,
    Nathalie Bardet. Stelladens mysteriosus: A Strange New
    Mosasaurid (Squamata) from the Maastrichtian (Late Cretaceous)
    of Morocco. Fossils, 2023; 1 (1): 2 DOI: 10.3390/fossils1010002 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/05/230518120907.htm

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