The dolphin-sized ichthyosaur represents the only known example in existence and helps to fill an evolutionary gap in the fossil record of ichthyosaurs.
The new study, published today, describes the newly named ichthyosaur called Xiphodracon goldencapensis, or the “Sword Dragon of Dorset”.
Thousands of ichthyosaur fossils have been found along the UK’s Jurassic Coast since the discoveries of pioneering palaeontologist Mary Anning. Yet the discovery of Xiphodracon is the first described genus of an Early Jurassic ichthyosaur described from the region in over 100 years.
Discovered near Golden Cap in 2001 by Dorset fossil collector Chris Moore, the fossil is almost perfectly preserved in three dimensions. The skeleton includes a skull with enormous eye socket and a long sword-like snout. The scientists say the animal would have been about three metres long and would have dined on fish and squid. The remains even show what may be traces of its last meal. It is probably the world’s most complete prehistoric reptile from the Pliensbachian period.
A trio of international palaeontologists, led by ichthyosaur expert Dr Dean Lomax, an 1851 Research Fellow at the University of Bristol, England, reveal that this long and narrow-snouted ichthyosaur illuminates a poorly understood time in ichthyosaur evolution, in the journal Papers in Palaeontology today.
The fossil comes from a time in the Early Jurassic known as the Pliensbachian, during which ichthyosaurs and other marine reptile fossils are rare.
Dr Lomax, who is also an Honorary Research Fellow at the University of Manchester, said: “I remember seeing the skeleton for the first time in 2016. Back then, I knew it was unusual, but I did not expect it to play such a pivotal role in helping to fill a gap in our understanding of a complex faunal turnover - the change in the composition of a species - during the Pliensbachian. This time is pretty crucial for ichthyosaurs as several families went extinct and new families emerged, yet Xiphodracon is something you might call a ‘missing piece of the ichthyosaur puzzle’. It is more closely related to species in the later Early Jurassic (in the Toarcian), and its discovery helps pinpoint when the faunal turnover occurred, being much earlier than expected.”
After its discovery in 2001, the skeleton was acquired by the Royal Ontario Museum, Canada, where it became part of their extensive collection of ichthyosaurs but had remained unstudied.
Ichthyosaur expert and co-author, Professor Judy Massare, from the State University of NY at Brockport, USA, added: “Thousands of complete or nearly complete ichthyosaur skeletons are known from strata before and after the Pliensbachian. The two faunas are quite distinct, with no species in common, even though the overall ecology is similar. Clearly, a major change in species diversity occurred sometime in the Pliensbachian. Xiphodracon helps to determine when the change occurred, but we still don’t know why.”
Dr Erin Maxwell, a co-author and ichthyosaur expert from the State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart, said: “This skeleton provides critical information for understanding ichthyosaur evolution, but also contributes to our understanding of what life must have been like in the Jurassic seas of Britain. The limb bones and teeth are malformed in such a way that points to serious injury or disease while the animal was still alive, and the skull appears to have been bitten by a large predator - likely another much larger species of ichthyosaur- giving us a cause of death for this individual. Life in the Mesozoic oceans was a dangerous prospect.”
Collectively, the trio have identified several features in Xiphodracon that have never been observed in any ichthyosaur. The most peculiar is a strange and unique bone around the nostril (called a lacrimal) that has prong-like bony structures.
Dr Lomax, who is the author of the recently published book, “The Secret Lives of Dinosaurs”, said: “One of the coolest things about identifying a new species is that you get to name it! We opted for Xiphodracon because of the long, sword-like snout (xipho from Greek xiphos for sword) and dracon (Greek and Latin for dragon) in reference to ichthyosaurs being referred to as “sea dragons” for over 200 years.”
The new research has been published today in the international journal “Papers in Palaeontology”. The skeleton is planned to go on display at the Royal Ontario Museum, Toronto, Canada.
Paper
'A new long and narrow-snouted ichthyosaur illuminates a complex faunal turnover during an undersampled Early Jurassic (Pliensbachian) interval' by D. Lomax, J. Massare, and E. Maxwell, in Papers in Paleontology