Ancient Marine Reptile's Stealthy Hunting Tactics Unveiled

TL;DR Summary
A groundbreaking 183-million-year-old fossil of an ichthyosaur's flipper reveals new features called chondroderms, suggesting these marine reptiles were silent, stealthy hunters capable of ambushing prey, which could revolutionize our understanding of their biology and evolution.
- “I Was Stunned Into Silence”: 183-Million-Year-Old Fossil Contains First-Ever Giant Ichthyosaur Soft Tissues IFLScience
- Adaptations for stealth in the wing-like flippers of a large ichthyosaur Nature
- How an ancient marine predator snuck up on its prey Science News
- Fossil discovery reveals ancient giant marine reptile relied on stealth while hunting in darkness Phys.org
- Dinosaur-age marine reptile flippers could solve noise pollution cosmosmagazine.com
Reading Insights
Total Reads
0
Unique Readers
1
Time Saved
3 min
vs 3 min read
Condensed
94%
586 → 35 words
Want the full story? Read the original article
Read on IFLScience