Fossils shed light on 'bizarre' reptile

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Fossils shed light on 'bizarre' reptile

#1  Postby DougC » May 07, 2016 2:01 am

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/science-environment-36195167

B.B.C. Article

A crocodile-sized creature that lived 242 million years ago was the first known vegetarian marine reptile, according to new fossil evidence.
Two specimens unearthed in China reveal details of the animal's skull and how it fed.
Named Atopodentatus, scientists say its hammer-shaped skull helped it to feed on underwater plants.

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Only a handful of marine reptiles, living or extinct, are known to be herbivores.
Dr Nick Fraser of National Museums Scotland, who worked on the fossil, said it belongs in the pages of a children's storybook by Dr Seuss, which depicts animals with a strange jumble of features.

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Re: Fossils shed light on 'bizarre' reptile

#2  Postby Hobbes Choice » May 08, 2016 11:06 pm

When you damage the holotype and give a name "Unplaceable-toothed" then people are going to call it bizzare. But it don't mean shit. It's just an admission of ignorance.
The fact that the person naming this beast has mixed Latin with Greek I can forgive. But I think time will prove that there is nothing weird about the Atopodentatus.
They used to think that Neanderthal was weird based on its holotype until it was know to be so common and succesful.
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