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avatar_sauroid

Arctic dwelling Ichthyosaurs

Started by sauroid, April 14, 2015, 03:43:41 PM

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sauroid

"you know you have a lot of prehistoric figures if you have at least twenty items per page of the prehistoric/dinosaur section on ebay." - anon.


CityRaptor

Interesting, but not exactly unexpected, given similar finds of other marine reptiles.
Jurassic Park is frightning in the dark
All the dinosaurs are running wild
Someone let T. Rex out of his pen
I'm afraid those things'll harm me
'Cause they sure don't act like Barney
And they think that I'm their dinner, not their friend
Oh no

Paleogene Pals

Yeah, but would there have been that much ice at the poles as the illustration suggests? I thought the poles were warmer during this time.

Halichoeres

Quote from: Paleogene Pals on April 15, 2015, 02:50:35 AM
Yeah, but would there have been that much ice at the poles as the illustration suggests? I thought the poles were warmer during this time.

Good question. The poles would be colder than the rest of the earth, but I have no idea if there would have been polar ice caps during the Mesozoic.
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LophoLeeVT

but if ictyosaurus inhabited the artic could animals like liopleorodon live there too
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CityRaptor

Given the presnece of plesiosaurs under similar conditions, I would say yes.
Jurassic Park is frightning in the dark
All the dinosaurs are running wild
Someone let T. Rex out of his pen
I'm afraid those things'll harm me
'Cause they sure don't act like Barney
And they think that I'm their dinner, not their friend
Oh no

SBell

Quote from: Halichoeres on April 15, 2015, 03:11:19 AM
Quote from: Paleogene Pals on April 15, 2015, 02:50:35 AM
Yeah, but would there have been that much ice at the poles as the illustration suggests? I thought the poles were warmer during this time.

Good question. The poles would be colder than the rest of the earth, but I have no idea if there would have been polar ice caps during the Mesozoic.

As far as I have known, there were no ice caps in the latter Mesozoic. There weren't really any until the Oligocene.

But there could have been localized freezing during winter, since there were still seasons based on orientation of the planet relative to the sun.

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