[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Subject Index][Author Index]
http://www.innovations-report.com/html/reports/earth_sciences/report-24996.html
Giant marine reptiles from Sweden
At the end of the Cretaceous, when large-sized theropods, such as Tyrannosaurus
rex, roamed terrestrial environments, shallow seas and oceans were invaded by
giant marine monitors ? the mosasaurs. A recent investigation, presented in a
new dissertation at Lund University in Sweden, has revealed that the Swedish
mosasaur fauna is one of the most diverse assemblages known. Moreover, available
data indicate that a major faunal turnover occurred about 80 million years ago.
The family Mosasauridae comprises large to giant (about 3-13 m long) reptiles
that inhabited epicontinental seas and coastal areas, in a brief 25 million year
period, during the later half of the Cretaceous (i.e. 90-65 million years ago).
With their elongate bodies, massive jaws and powerful conical teeth, mosasaurs
were probably the nearest equivalent to the mythical sea serpent that ever ruled
the oceans. They swam by means of lateral undulations generated by the posterior
portion of the elongated body and the deep, laterally compressed tail, while the
flipper-shaped extremities were used as stabilisers for steering rather than for
propulsion. Living as active predators at the top of the marine food chain,
mosasaurs hunted in near-surface water with the help of a good sense of sight
and sub-aqueous hearing. Several feeding strategies have been proposed as
plausible, and many species exploited a wide range of food sources, including
molluscs, fish and aquatic tetrapods.
Marine strata of Late Cretaceous age in southern Sweden have yielded a
considerable number of isolated tooth-crowns, vertebrae and other, fragmentary
skeletal remains of mosasaurs (in addition to fossils of dinosaurs, plesiosaurs,
pterosaurs, sharks and sea turtles). Together with extensive mosasaur material
(collected by quarrymen in connection with limestone quarrying in the early
twentieth century) housed at various museums and departments in Sweden, these
specimens demonstrate that the mosasaur assemblage of southern Sweden is one of
the most diverse faunas known. The assemblage is similar in composition to
approximately coeval mosasaur faunas from the Western Interior and the Gulf
Coast of North America.
Available data suggest that the group increased steadily in diversity from the
late Coniacian until near the early/late Campanian boundary (i.e. 90-80 million
years ago), at which a seemingly catastrophic event, or a series of events,
severely reduced the number of species in, at least, North America and Europe.
The extinction favoured a radiation of more derived, although often less
diverse, mosasaur taxa, which persisted until the end of the Maastrichtian
stage, when the group suddenly and unexpectedly vanished.