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Attenborough unveils ‘T-Rex of the sea’ with 150-million-year-old fossil

Sir David Attenborough and Steve Etches have hailed the 'exciting' pliosaur discovery - BBC Studios

Sir David Attenborough and Steve Etches have hailed the 'exciting' pliosaur discovery - BBC Studios© Provided by The Telegraph

Sir David Attenborough has unveiled a 150-million-year-old “T-Rex of the sea” which was discovered in Dorset.

The marine reptile was identified as a completely new species of pliosaur and will be featured in a BBC programme called Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster to be released on New Year’s Day.

The 97-year-old will document the extraction of the giant fossilised skull. Sir David described the pliosaur as “one of the greatest predators the world has ever seen”.

The skull is around two metres long and was embedded 15 metres down the cliff and 11 metres from the ground. Its position on the face made it “very difficult to reach and even harder to work on”, according to Sir David.

Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster will show the team abseiling down the cliff and drilling into the rockface, while working to stop the fossilised remains falling into the sea below. 

The pliosaur was a fearsome marine predator - BBC Studios
The pliosaur was a fearsome marine predator - BBC Studios© Provided by The Telegraph

This pliosaur was one of the fiercest Jurassic predators that hunted in the Kimmeridgian sea during the age of the dinosaurs.

Sir David said the rocks where the marine creature was buried were once mud on the seabed but that: “Over millions of years, the continents shifted, the seas receded, and today, as these cliffs erode, fossilised skeletons are revealed.”

he fossil has survived with dozens of teeth intact with which it once hunted prey, including ichthyosaurs, a large marine reptile.

The initial discovery was made by Philip Jacobs, a textile designer who has searched for marine reptile fossils on the Jurassic coast for decades.

After finding the fossil, Mr Jacobs contacted Steve Etches, from The Etches Collection Museum of Jurassic Marine Life, and said: “I’ve just found something quite extraordinary.”

Using a drone, Mr Jacobs and Mr Etches located the spot on the cliff face where the fossil was and assembled a team of palaeontologists, climbers and BBC cameramen to begin the extraction process.

Mr Etches said: “It was very exciting but, thinking logistically, not a good place to collect a fossil from. The cliffs are sheer, crumbling and unsafe, eroding quickly. It’s a very dangerous area – with large falls and slippery ledges – so safety was paramount.” 

The Etches Collection Museum will provide a lasting home for the artifact - BBC Studios
The Etches Collection Museum will provide a lasting home for the artifact - BBC Studios© Provided by The Telegraph

The team believes the entire pliosaur may be inside the cliff, but for now are focused on the skull, which can reveal more about an animal than any other part of its skeleton.

It has survived in exceptional condition and is thought to be the best preserved and most complete of any pliosaur discovered to date.

The skull will be displayed at The Etches Collection Museum of Jurassic Marine Life after the documentary airs. 

Story by Alex Barton : The Telegraph:

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