Ancient
Ichthyosaur Mother Did Not Explode, Scientists Say
By Wynne
Parry
It is unlikely that the body of a mother ichthyosaur exploded,
say researchers who offer another explanation for the scattered remains of
embryos found around her in rock that was once deep underwater.
Rather,
the scattering of the embryos was probably caused by minor sea currents after
the expectant mother died and her body decayed some 182 million years ago, the
researchers propose.
If this scenario sounds confusing, it is important to know
that ichthyosaurs, extinct
marine reptilesthat lived at the same time as the
dinosaurs, did not lay eggs but rather carried their young in their bodies
until they gave birth. Ichthyosaurs resembled fish but, unlike most fish,
breathed air through lungs.
The nearly intact skeleton of the female ichthyosaur in question was found in Holzmaden, Germany. But
the remains of most of the approximately 10 embryos were scattered far outside
her body it. Other fossilized ichthyosaur remains have been found in similarly
strange arrangements, with skeletons usually complete but jumbled to some
degree.
A Swiss
and German research team set out to examine the idea that after death, such
large-lunged marine creatures floated on the surface, with putrefaction gases
building up inside them, until the gases escaped, often by bursting. Such
explosions would jumble the bones.
The researchers examined the decay and preservation of
ichthyosaur skeletons and compared this information with that of modern
animals, particularly marine mammals. To get an idea of the amount of pressure
that builds up after death during different stages of bloating, they looked at
measurements from the abdomens of 100 human
corpses.
"Our
data and a review of the literature demonstrate that carcasses sink and do not
explode (and spread skeletal elements)," the researchers wrote online Feb.
1 in the journal Palaeobiodiversity and Palaeoenvironments.
Generally,
carcasses of ichthyosaurs would have sunk to the seafloor and broken down
completely. Only under specific circumstances — including in warmer water less
than 164 feet (50 meters) deep — would gas inside the body have brought the
remains to the surface, said the researchers, led by Achim
Reisdorf of the University of Basel in Switzerland. When this happened,
the carcass would decompose slowly, scattering bones over a wide area.
Ichthyosaurs' remains stayed neatly in place only under
specific conditions, according to the research team: The water pressure had to
be great enough to prevent them from floating, scavengers
did not pick them over, and strong currents did
not disturb them.
The
female ichthyosaur died in water about 492 feet (150 m) deep. Decomposition of
the body released the embryo skeletons, and minor currents along the seafloor
distributed them around her body, the researchers speculate.
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