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avatar_suspsy

Largest Ichthyosaur Ever Discovered!

Started by suspsy, April 10, 2018, 12:40:55 AM

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suspsy

Untitled by suspsy3, on Flickr


SBell

Hopefully, once the material is compiled better, we will have a better understanding of its life habits.

Faelrin

I didn't think I'd ever hear about an icthyosaur being this huge. Granted I wasn't even aware that Shonisaurus was that big to begin with. I really ought to do some more research on these.
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mgaguilar

If I read that correctly, they previously mistakenly assumed that several of the fossils were from terrestrial individuals?
Wow, this might yield some pretty amazing discoveries.

Halichoeres

The actual fossil:

It's fragmentary enough that, yes, based on its size it was assumed to be a dinosaur or something.

Paper is open access: http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article/figure/image?size=large&id=info:doi/10.1371/journal.pone.0194742.g005
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Archosauria

Wow, and I thought Shonisaurus was large!
Incredible discovery!
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Halichoeres

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#7
It may be Shastasaurus if I am not mistaken, a new specimen, or a new genus of itchthyosaur.

Lone Trike

I wonder if these huge Ichthyosaurs were filter feeders, as most huge marine animals today are.
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ITdactyl

It would be neat if they were filter feeders.  On that note, have any ichthyosaurs ever been described as filter-feeders?  In my mind, with all the calamari floating around, the large ones would most likely be suction feeders.


Lone Trike

I like the idea of them being basically giant vacuum cleaners :)) I just googled it and found this National Geographic article. Shonisaurus sikanniensis is mentioned there a filter-feeder. However the scientific paper by Nicholls and Manabe, the article is based on, is not open-access unfortunately!
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Neosodon

Quote from: ITdactyl on April 18, 2018, 11:32:17 AM
It would be neat if they were filter feeders.  On that note, have any ichthyosaurs ever been described as filter-feeders?  In my mind, with all the calamari floating around, the large ones would most likely be suction feeders.
I'd like to see an artists rendition of a filter feeding icthyosaur. Would they still have long narrow beaks?

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stegosauria

Not all recent giant marine creature is filter-feeder. The sperm whale hunts squids and it can grow up to 20 metres in length. The first whales also were active fish eaters and I wouldn't consider Basilosaurus as a small creature.