Bigger Fish Ever

Bigger Fish EverAn international team of scientists has uncovered the remains of the world’s largest fish. The 50ft Leedsichthys problematicus swam the oceans of the Jurassic era more than 160m years ago, sweeping up shoals of plankton through giant, mesh-covered gills. Leedsichthys was eventually wiped out by the same catastrophe that killed the dinosaurs 66m years ago.

The discovery by the team – led by Professor Jeff Liston of the National Museums of Scotland – is intriguing because it reveals that just as dinosaurs on land were going through major changes which saw the appearance of animals of vast dimensions – creatures that included Diplodocus, Apatosaurus and Brachiosaurus – reptiles in the sea had also started to grow to vast proportions in the Jurassic.

“The process is known as gigantism,” said Liston. “It was known about in land animals at the time but we had no way of knowing if a parallel process occurred in the oceans. We now know that it did – though the reason for appearance of these gigantic beasts, both on land and in the water, is not clear at present.”

Pieces of Leedsichthys fossils were first found by the British collector Alfred Leeds in 1889. Similar remains were subsequently found at other sites, from northern Germany to Normandy, Mexico and the Atacama desert in Chile. However, knowledge of the fish remained sketchy because of the poor quality of these finds. Leedsichthys had a skeleton that was mostly made of cartilage and which does not fossilise easily. This paucity of evidence and lack of clarity about its dimensions led to the fish being given its second name: problematicus.

Based on the best evidence they could muster, scientists calculated that Leedsichthys could have grown to be more than 25ft long. A chance discovery in a quarry outside Whittlesea near Peterborough several years ago changed that. “Two students were working on a geology project in the quarry when they noticed pieces of bone sticking out of the rocks,” said Liston, who is scheduled to present details of his team’s discovery at the Symposium on Vertebrate Palaeontology and Comparative Anatomy in Edinburgh this week. “It turned out to be fossil pieces of Leedsichthys – a real breakthrough.” READ MORE….

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