"Unearthing Japan's Unprecedented 72 Million-Year-Old 'Blue Dragon'"

1 min read
Source: Livescience.com
"Unearthing Japan's Unprecedented 72 Million-Year-Old 'Blue Dragon'"
Photo: Livescience.com
TL;DR Summary

Scientists in Japan have discovered the near-complete remains of a 72 million-year-old sea monster, named "blue dragon," that belonged to a new species of mosasaur. The fossils, the most complete ever found in Japan and the northwest Pacific, reveal an unusual body plan with large rear flippers and a dorsal fin, setting it apart from other mosasaurs. The creature, about the size of a great white shark, challenges our understanding of how mosasaurs swam and hunted, and highlights the diversity of these apex marine predators that lived during the Cretaceous period.

Share this article

Reading Insights

Total Reads

0

Unique Readers

0

Time Saved

3 min

vs 4 min read

Condensed

88%

77891 words

Want the full story? Read the original article

Read on Livescience.com