"11-Year-Old's Discovery: Uncovering the Largest Prehistoric Marine Reptile"

TL;DR Summary
An 11-year-old and her father discovered a massive jawbone on a beach in Somerset, England, which belonged to a newfound species of ichthyosaur, likely the largest known marine reptile to have swum in Earth's oceans. Named Ichthyotitan severnensis, the creature is estimated to have been over 82 feet long. The discovery sheds light on the prehistoric giant's role in evolutionary history and the ancient ocean ecosystem. The nearly complete jawbone, along with a previously found piece, has provided valuable insights into the creature's size and growth, and will be displayed at the Bristol Museum and Art Gallery.
- Prehistoric marine reptile may have rivaled the blue whale in size Yahoo! Voices
- 11-year-old finds bones on UK beach with dad — solving 'multimillion-year-old jigsaw' Yahoo! Voices
- An 11-Year-Old Girl's Fossil Find Is the Largest Known Ocean Reptile The New York Times
- Scientists Discover 'Sea Dragons,' the Largest Marine Reptile Ever - WSJ The Wall Street Journal
- Father-daughter team helps discover giant prehistoric sea beast The Washington Post
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
0
Time Saved
6 min
vs 7 min read
Condensed
93%
1,342 → 97 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on Yahoo! Voices