Giant Tooth of Ancient Marine Reptile Discovered in Alps

The root of the thickest ichthyosaur tooth found so far with a diameter of 60 millimeters. Rosi ROTH EUREKALERT!/AFP
The root of the thickest ichthyosaur tooth found so far with a diameter of 60 millimeters. Rosi ROTH EUREKALERT!/AFP
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Giant Tooth of Ancient Marine Reptile Discovered in Alps

The root of the thickest ichthyosaur tooth found so far with a diameter of 60 millimeters. Rosi ROTH EUREKALERT!/AFP
The root of the thickest ichthyosaur tooth found so far with a diameter of 60 millimeters. Rosi ROTH EUREKALERT!/AFP

The fossils of three ichthyosaurs -- giant marine reptiles that patrolled primordial oceans -- have been discovered high up in the Swiss Alps, and include the largest ever tooth found for the species, a study said Thursday.

With elongated bodies and small heads, the prehistoric leviathans weighed up to 80 metric tons (88 US tons) and grew to 20 meters (yards), making them among the largest animals to have ever lived, AFP reported.

They first appeared 250 million years ago in the early Triassic, and a smaller, dolphin-like subtype survived until 90 million years ago. But the gigantic ichthyosaurs, which comprised most of the species, died out 200 million years ago.

Unlike dinosaurs, ichthyosaurs barely left a trace of fossil remains, and "why that is remains a great mystery to this day," said Martin Sander of the University of Bonn, lead author of the paper in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

The specimens in question, dated to 205 million years ago in the study, were unearthed between 1976 and 1990 during geological surveys, but were only recently analyzed in detail.

Fun fact: they were discovered at an altitude of 2,800 meters (9,100 feet). During their lifetimes the three swam in waters around the supercontinent Pangea-- but due to plate tectonics and the folding of the Alps, the fossils kept rising.

Ichthyosaurs were previously thought to have only inhabited the deep ocean, but the rocks from which the new fossils derive are believed to have been at the bottom of a shallow coastal area. It could be that some of the giants followed schools of fish there.

There are two sets of skeletal remains. One consists of ten rib fragments and a vertebra, suggesting an animal some 20 meters long, which is more or less equivalent to the largest ichthyosaur to have been found, in Canada.

The second animal measured 15 meters, according to an estimate from the seven vertebrae found.

"From our point of view, however, the tooth is particularly exciting," explained Sander.

"Because this is huge by ichthyosaur standards: Its root was 60 millimeters (2.4 inches) in diameter - the largest specimen still in a complete skull to date was 20 millimeters and came from an ichthyosaur that was nearly 18 meters long."

While this could indicate a beast of epic proportions, it's more likely to have come from an ichthyosaur with particularly gigantic teeth, rather than a particularly gigantic ichthyosaur.

Current research holds that extreme gigantism is incompatible with a predatory lifestyle requiring teeth.

That's why the largest known animal to have ever lived -- the blue whale at 30 meters long and 150 tons -- lacks teeth.

Blue whales are filter feeders, while the much smaller sperm whales, at 20 meters long and 50 tons, are hunters, and use more of their energy to fuel their muscles.

"Marine predators therefore probably can't get much bigger than a sperm whale," Sander said, though more fossils would need to be found to know for certain. "Maybe there are more remains of the giant sea creatures hidden beneath the glaciers," he said.



Rare Meteorite from Mars Sparks Controversy between Niger and Sotheby’s

The Martian meteorite found in Niger went on display in New York before it was auctioned (EPA) 
The Martian meteorite found in Niger went on display in New York before it was auctioned (EPA) 
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Rare Meteorite from Mars Sparks Controversy between Niger and Sotheby’s

The Martian meteorite found in Niger went on display in New York before it was auctioned (EPA) 
The Martian meteorite found in Niger went on display in New York before it was auctioned (EPA) 

“Brazen! It is brazen!” Professor Paul Sereno said down the phone line from Chicago.

He made no effort to disguise his anger that a rare meteorite from Mars discovered two years ago in the West African nation of Niger ended up being auctioned off in New York last month to an unnamed buyer, according to BBC.

The palaeontologist, who has close connections with the country, said it should be back in Niger.

This millions-of-years-old piece of the Red Planet, the largest ever found on Earth, fetched $4.3 million (3.2 million pounds) at Sotheby’s. Like the buyer, the seller was kept anonymous.

But it is unclear if any of this money went to Niger.

Sotheby's strongly disputes this, saying the correct procedures were followed, but Niger has now launched an investigation into the circumstances of the discovery and sale of the meteorite, which has been given the scientific and unromantic name NWA 16788 (NWA standing for north-west Africa).

An Italian academic article published last year said that it was found on 16 November 2023 in the Sahara Desert in Niger's Agadez region, 90km (56 miles) to the west of the Chirfa Oasis, by “a meteorite hunter, whose identity remained undisclosed.”

The article said NWA 16788 was “sold by the local community to an international dealer” and was then transferred to a private gallery in the Italian city of Arezzo.

A team of scientists from the University of Florence was able to examine it to learn more about its structure and where it came from. The meteorite was then briefly on display last year in Italy, including at the Italian Space Agency in Rome.

It was next seen in public in New York last month, minus two slices that stayed in Italy for more research.

Sotheby's said that NWA 16788 was “exported from Niger and transported in line with all relevant international procedures.”

A series of global agreements, including under the UN's cultural organization UNESCO, have tried to regulate the trade in these objects.

Niger passed its own law in 1997 aimed at protecting its heritage.

Sereno pointed to one section with a detailed list of all the categories included. “Mineralogical specimens” are mentioned among the art works, architecture and archaeological finds but meteorites are not specifically named.

In its statement on the Sotheby's sale, Niger admitted that it “does not yet have specific legislation on meteorites” - a line that the auction house also pointed out. But it remains unclear how someone was able to get such a heavy, conspicuous artefact out of the country without the authorities apparently noticing.

Morocco has faced a similar issue with the huge number of meteorites - more than 1,000 - found within its borders, which include a part of the Sahara.

Professor Hasnaa Chennaoui Aoudjehane has spent much of the past 25 years trying to hold on to some of that extraterrestrial material for her country.

In 2011, Chennaoui was responsible for gathering material in the desert from an observed meteorite fall that turned out to be from Mars.

Later named the Tissint meteorite, it weighed 7kg in all, but now she said only 30g remain in Morocco. Some of the rest is in museums around the world, with the biggest piece on display in London's Natural History Museum.

For his part, Sereno said he hopes that the Sotheby's sale will prove a turning-point - firstly by motivating the Nigerien authorities to act and secondly “if it ever sees the light of day in a public museum, [the museum] is going to have to deal with the fact that Niger is openly contesting it.”