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These are the user uploaded subtitles that are being translated: 1 00:00:20,660 --> 00:00:23,900 The remains of a dragon have just been discovered 2 00:00:23,900 --> 00:00:27,660 in the cliffs of Dorset on the south-east coast of England - 3 00:00:27,660 --> 00:00:32,420 one that has been hidden in the rocks for 200 million years. 4 00:00:34,700 --> 00:00:39,580 It was an enormous marine reptile that ruled the seas 5 00:00:39,580 --> 00:00:44,100 at the same time as the dinosaurs ruled the land. 6 00:00:47,860 --> 00:00:51,300 Scientifically, it's called an ichthyosaur. 7 00:00:52,740 --> 00:00:54,580 Since Jurassic times, 8 00:00:54,580 --> 00:00:58,260 its fossilized bones have been locked away in these cliffs. 9 00:00:59,820 --> 00:01:03,740 But now we have a chance to reveal it and its story. 10 00:01:03,740 --> 00:01:05,860 Lots and lots of bone in there. 11 00:01:10,740 --> 00:01:14,140 The bones are so well preserved, it may be able to give us 12 00:01:14,140 --> 00:01:17,620 new insights into the lives of these remarkable creatures. 13 00:01:19,380 --> 00:01:21,460 Together with a team of scientists, 14 00:01:21,460 --> 00:01:25,860 we will reconstruct the skeleton and compare it to animals alive today. 15 00:01:30,300 --> 00:01:33,580 We'll try to understand how it looked. 16 00:01:33,580 --> 00:01:36,020 We have actual preservation of the skin of our ichthyosaur. 17 00:01:36,020 --> 00:01:37,260 How extraordinary! 18 00:01:38,420 --> 00:01:41,020 And how it survived in the open ocean. 19 00:01:43,340 --> 00:01:46,940 Could this be a completely new species of ichthyosaur? 20 00:01:49,020 --> 00:01:51,220 Our search for evidence will lead us 21 00:01:51,220 --> 00:01:55,300 into an intriguing forensic investigation into how it died. 22 00:01:57,740 --> 00:02:01,100 I think you're looking at a 200 million year old murder mystery. 23 00:02:02,820 --> 00:02:07,100 Solving that mystery will throw light on the extraordinary world 24 00:02:07,100 --> 00:02:12,460 in the Jurassic seas that once existed just off our shores. 25 00:02:22,540 --> 00:02:25,620 The story of this extraordinary dragon 26 00:02:25,620 --> 00:02:28,620 starts here in Dorset on the south coast of England, 27 00:02:28,620 --> 00:02:32,300 one of the most important geological sites in the world - 28 00:02:32,300 --> 00:02:34,300 the Jurassic Coast. 29 00:02:39,420 --> 00:02:44,260 It stretches for almost 100 miles from Devon to Dorset. 30 00:02:47,540 --> 00:02:49,580 And it was here that the early geologists 31 00:02:49,580 --> 00:02:53,020 first collected evidence that once the world was ruled 32 00:02:53,020 --> 00:02:57,700 by monstrous reptiles, quite unlike anything alive on Earth today. 33 00:03:05,060 --> 00:03:08,340 Evidence of creatures that existed all that time ago 34 00:03:08,340 --> 00:03:10,700 can still be found on these beaches. 35 00:03:13,340 --> 00:03:17,660 Fossil collectors have been coming here for literally centuries 36 00:03:17,660 --> 00:03:22,060 and these rapidly eroding cliffs are providing them 37 00:03:22,060 --> 00:03:25,980 with a continuous supply of exciting things to find. 38 00:03:28,780 --> 00:03:32,100 I started looking for fossils when I was a boy 39 00:03:32,100 --> 00:03:35,140 and I've never lost the feeling of excitement 40 00:03:35,140 --> 00:03:37,900 and anticipation of what one might discover. 41 00:03:42,980 --> 00:03:47,660 The commonest fossils here are coiled shells called ammonites 42 00:03:47,660 --> 00:03:50,060 and you can find them all over the place. 43 00:03:50,060 --> 00:03:53,540 There's one here on this boulder. 44 00:03:53,540 --> 00:03:55,780 You can see the whorls there, 45 00:03:55,780 --> 00:03:58,420 but it's mostly been worn away by the sea. 46 00:03:58,420 --> 00:04:02,260 But sometimes if you're lucky, you can find nodules like this 47 00:04:02,260 --> 00:04:03,780 and if you look at them, 48 00:04:03,780 --> 00:04:10,580 you can see there's the edge there of an ammonite and if I hit it... 49 00:04:10,580 --> 00:04:14,500 If I put on protective glasses and I hit it, it should... 50 00:04:17,180 --> 00:04:18,820 HE LAUGHS 51 00:04:18,820 --> 00:04:20,940 How about that? 52 00:04:20,940 --> 00:04:22,940 Wow! 53 00:04:23,980 --> 00:04:25,260 What a find! 54 00:04:28,180 --> 00:04:31,540 Ammonites, in fact, are quite common on this beach, 55 00:04:31,540 --> 00:04:35,180 but every now and again, something truly rare 56 00:04:35,180 --> 00:04:41,300 and spectacular is found here and quite often by this man - 57 00:04:41,300 --> 00:04:44,340 one of the most skilled fossil hunters I know. 58 00:04:45,780 --> 00:04:50,380 Chris Moore has been collecting fossils here for more than 30 years. 59 00:04:50,380 --> 00:04:53,580 Recently, he came across a boulder 60 00:04:53,580 --> 00:04:56,700 which he thought might contain something unusual. 61 00:04:58,340 --> 00:04:59,700 Back in his workshop, 62 00:04:59,700 --> 00:05:03,420 he exposed a mosaic of small, beautifully preserved bones 63 00:05:03,420 --> 00:05:06,940 which he knew straight away were the front fins, 64 00:05:06,940 --> 00:05:09,300 the paddles, of an ichthyosaur. 65 00:05:11,180 --> 00:05:14,620 But they were unlike any he had ever seen before. 66 00:05:24,140 --> 00:05:25,740 I still collect fossils. 67 00:05:28,020 --> 00:05:30,860 I even have the remains of an ichthyosaur - 68 00:05:30,860 --> 00:05:34,620 a small one of a kind that's relatively common. 69 00:05:37,540 --> 00:05:42,020 This was collected by Chris about ten years ago in Dorset. 70 00:05:42,020 --> 00:05:44,460 I never found anything as beautiful as this. 71 00:05:44,460 --> 00:05:48,020 It's got jaws and it's got teeth and it's got paddles. 72 00:05:49,340 --> 00:05:52,860 And Dorset was the very first place 73 00:05:52,860 --> 00:05:57,460 where they found a really complete skeleton of one of these creatures. 74 00:05:57,460 --> 00:06:00,260 This is a picture of it, 75 00:06:00,260 --> 00:06:05,780 published for the very first time in 1814. 76 00:06:05,780 --> 00:06:10,300 People thought it was some kind of monster, but what was it? 77 00:06:10,300 --> 00:06:15,740 They thought it was a kind of cross between a reptile and a fish 78 00:06:15,740 --> 00:06:22,420 so they called it an ichthyosaur - a fish lizard or sea dragon. 79 00:06:24,860 --> 00:06:27,700 Since that time, many fossil fragments of ichthyosaurs 80 00:06:27,700 --> 00:06:30,220 have been discovered on the Jurassic Coast. 81 00:06:32,180 --> 00:06:34,860 But complete skeletons are very rare. 82 00:06:37,380 --> 00:06:39,900 The particular one that Chris has just found 83 00:06:39,900 --> 00:06:44,540 is significantly different from any that's ever been found here before. 84 00:06:48,860 --> 00:06:52,740 It's not easy to get to the beach where it was discovered. 85 00:06:52,740 --> 00:06:56,140 At high tide, the only way to do so is by boat. 86 00:07:00,420 --> 00:07:04,900 I asked Chris where the rest of the skeleton might still lie. 87 00:07:04,900 --> 00:07:07,500 It's in the very top limestone bed 88 00:07:07,500 --> 00:07:09,940 where the cliffs are at the lowest point. 89 00:07:09,940 --> 00:07:13,420 It's got about two metres on top of clay 90 00:07:13,420 --> 00:07:15,020 and we'll have to clear this material off 91 00:07:15,020 --> 00:07:16,820 till we get to the limestone bed. 92 00:07:16,820 --> 00:07:18,300 It' a lot of hard work. 93 00:07:18,300 --> 00:07:21,500 It's a lot of digging, yeah, and also we have to do it, really, 94 00:07:21,500 --> 00:07:25,060 before the winter turns again and the weather gets bad 95 00:07:25,060 --> 00:07:27,660 because there's a chance that the next landslip 96 00:07:27,660 --> 00:07:30,260 will just push it off onto the beach and destroy it. 97 00:07:33,140 --> 00:07:37,180 In Jurassic times, sea covered all this area. 98 00:07:39,220 --> 00:07:41,860 On its floor, sediments washed down from the land 99 00:07:41,860 --> 00:07:45,500 turned into layers of shales and limestone. 100 00:07:47,300 --> 00:07:50,020 The land rose, the sea retreated 101 00:07:50,020 --> 00:07:51,900 and now in the rocks, 102 00:07:51,900 --> 00:07:53,980 you can find the remains of the creatures 103 00:07:53,980 --> 00:07:56,860 that once lived in those ancient waters. 104 00:08:00,940 --> 00:08:04,500 As well as the remains of ammonites, there are the bones of fish, 105 00:08:04,500 --> 00:08:06,020 such as sharks. 106 00:08:08,620 --> 00:08:14,140 But the top predators at this time were reptiles - ichthyosaurs. 107 00:08:17,260 --> 00:08:23,100 They dominated the seas for more than 150 million years. 108 00:08:33,460 --> 00:08:36,300 After getting permission to dig, 109 00:08:36,300 --> 00:08:40,060 the team clamber down the cliff to the particular layer 110 00:08:40,060 --> 00:08:43,620 where the rest of our ichthyosaur skeleton should be lying. 111 00:08:43,620 --> 00:08:45,140 I'm going to need at least another metre, 112 00:08:45,140 --> 00:08:46,620 cos I need to drop down to the next bit. 113 00:08:48,860 --> 00:08:50,860 It's dangerous work. 114 00:08:50,860 --> 00:08:53,540 These cliffs occasionally collapse without warning. 115 00:09:01,980 --> 00:09:05,540 To make sure that they don't damage any of the fossils, 116 00:09:05,540 --> 00:09:08,580 the team do all the digging by hand. 117 00:09:10,420 --> 00:09:12,260 There's just loads of roots. 118 00:09:13,540 --> 00:09:17,340 Tonnes of clay have to be removed before they even reach 119 00:09:17,340 --> 00:09:19,500 the layer of limestone where they hope 120 00:09:19,500 --> 00:09:21,580 the rest of the bones still lie. 121 00:09:21,580 --> 00:09:23,220 Wayhey! 122 00:09:26,500 --> 00:09:28,300 It was on this very coast 123 00:09:28,300 --> 00:09:32,340 that the first complete skeleton of an ichthyosaur was discovered. 124 00:09:34,220 --> 00:09:36,220 It was found in the 19th century 125 00:09:36,220 --> 00:09:39,700 by a remarkable woman called Mary Anning. 126 00:09:41,300 --> 00:09:44,540 Mary lived in the little town of Lyme Regis, 127 00:09:44,540 --> 00:09:48,980 the daughter of a cabinet maker who collected fossils as a hobby. 128 00:09:51,460 --> 00:09:54,300 When Mary was only 11, her father died 129 00:09:54,300 --> 00:09:58,100 so she and her brother started selling fossils to visitors 130 00:09:58,100 --> 00:10:00,540 to support their widowed mother. 131 00:10:08,300 --> 00:10:14,180 Lyme Regis Museum now devotes a whole gallery to her and her finds. 132 00:10:15,660 --> 00:10:22,740 Mary had an extraordinary talent for finding fossils and in 1811, 133 00:10:22,740 --> 00:10:26,380 she discovered this gigantic creature, 134 00:10:26,380 --> 00:10:28,980 the like of which no-one had ever seen before. 135 00:10:30,060 --> 00:10:33,180 Dinosaurs had not yet been discovered. 136 00:10:33,180 --> 00:10:36,420 No-one had any idea that way back in pre-history, 137 00:10:36,420 --> 00:10:39,580 there were such gigantic creatures, 138 00:10:39,580 --> 00:10:41,980 so this caused a sensation. 139 00:10:44,860 --> 00:10:48,380 It was then that the popular name "sea dragon" 140 00:10:48,380 --> 00:10:50,580 was given to these prehistoric monsters. 141 00:10:51,980 --> 00:10:55,340 Scientists speculated on how they lived 142 00:10:55,340 --> 00:10:59,660 and artists tried to imagine what they must have looked like 143 00:10:59,660 --> 00:11:02,100 and how they behaved. 144 00:11:09,740 --> 00:11:14,500 Back at the cliff face, Chris and his team are hard at it. 145 00:11:15,620 --> 00:11:18,740 But they haven't found any more bones. 146 00:11:27,300 --> 00:11:30,980 This is a massive piece. Tombstone! 147 00:11:30,980 --> 00:11:32,500 Right, ready? 148 00:11:32,500 --> 00:11:36,220 Chris is convinced that the skeleton to which the paddles belonged 149 00:11:36,220 --> 00:11:39,500 must be somewhere here and they check every rock. 150 00:11:39,500 --> 00:11:41,780 Beautiful shale! 151 00:11:48,940 --> 00:11:53,500 Lovely! Anything interesting? Moment of truth... 152 00:11:53,500 --> 00:11:56,140 Nothing. 153 00:11:56,140 --> 00:11:58,380 Just push it off. Yeah. 154 00:12:02,420 --> 00:12:04,860 Is there anything showing? 155 00:12:04,860 --> 00:12:06,740 Nothing else here. 156 00:12:06,740 --> 00:12:09,140 Oh, gosh, that's hard work. 157 00:12:14,020 --> 00:12:16,060 I hope there's something here. 158 00:12:16,060 --> 00:12:17,860 I almost don't want to look! 159 00:12:19,900 --> 00:12:21,420 Ah! What have you found? 160 00:12:21,420 --> 00:12:25,660 There's a bone. Loads of bone going all the way... There's bone there. 161 00:12:25,660 --> 00:12:28,420 There's something here! HE LAUGHS 162 00:12:29,580 --> 00:12:34,460 At long last, the team's efforts are rewarded. 163 00:12:34,460 --> 00:12:37,020 We've got some bones here! 164 00:12:37,020 --> 00:12:40,260 There's loads of bones. Fantastic! 165 00:12:40,260 --> 00:12:41,980 Ah! What's this? 166 00:12:41,980 --> 00:12:44,100 Is that a vertebrae? 167 00:12:44,100 --> 00:12:46,940 But the bones are not in the position 168 00:12:46,940 --> 00:12:49,100 the team had expected to find them. 169 00:12:49,100 --> 00:12:52,420 Instead of lying across the face of the cliff, 170 00:12:52,420 --> 00:12:55,540 the skeleton seems to be bending back into it. 171 00:12:55,540 --> 00:12:58,500 We're going to have to go down through there. 172 00:12:58,500 --> 00:13:01,180 It means much more work. 173 00:13:02,340 --> 00:13:06,420 And to make matters worse, a storm is brewing. 174 00:13:07,580 --> 00:13:09,100 The rain is just starting, 175 00:13:09,100 --> 00:13:11,340 but I think we've got to make a bit of a run for it. 176 00:13:21,100 --> 00:13:25,580 We won't be working any more in this for the moment. It's torrential. 177 00:13:25,580 --> 00:13:27,820 Beautiful rainbow, though. 178 00:13:27,820 --> 00:13:31,740 A rainbow will be little comfort if the storm persists. 179 00:13:32,900 --> 00:13:36,300 Rough seas and heavy downpours can cause landslips, 180 00:13:36,300 --> 00:13:39,900 which could easily destroy any chance of retrieving the bones. 181 00:13:44,220 --> 00:13:48,300 It was after just such a storm that Chris found the front limbs, 182 00:13:48,300 --> 00:13:50,860 the paddles of our sea dragon. 183 00:13:53,380 --> 00:13:56,220 They convinced him that the fossil was something special. 184 00:13:56,220 --> 00:13:59,700 VOICEOVER: You can see why when you compare them 185 00:13:59,700 --> 00:14:01,780 VOICEOVER: to the paddles of the kind of ichthyosaur 186 00:14:01,780 --> 00:14:03,340 VOICEOVER: that's usually found here. 187 00:14:03,340 --> 00:14:07,980 This is an adult and this is the paddle of this creature 188 00:14:07,980 --> 00:14:11,620 and if you compare it to this one... 189 00:14:16,340 --> 00:14:20,900 Oh, it's huge. Oh, yeah. I've never seen anything quite like it. 190 00:14:20,900 --> 00:14:24,460 There are half a dozen rows of digits there and how many there? 191 00:14:24,460 --> 00:14:27,140 I think there's at least nine or ten crossways 192 00:14:27,140 --> 00:14:30,500 and obviously, you know, many more in length. 193 00:14:30,500 --> 00:14:33,180 It's getting on for twice the number of digits. 194 00:14:33,180 --> 00:14:36,380 And the whole shape of the fin is completely... Quite different. 195 00:14:36,380 --> 00:14:38,100 And must be new, therefore? 196 00:14:38,100 --> 00:14:42,900 I think so. I've never seen anything quite like it. How exciting! 197 00:14:42,900 --> 00:14:44,980 VOICEOVER: It's extremely rare to find 198 00:14:44,980 --> 00:14:47,780 VOICEOVER: a new species of ichthyosaur these days. 199 00:14:47,780 --> 00:14:53,300 Only nine have been discovered here in the last 200 years. 200 00:14:53,300 --> 00:14:56,540 But can these strange paddles tell us something 201 00:14:56,540 --> 00:14:59,180 about how this odd ichthyosaur lived? 202 00:15:01,060 --> 00:15:05,100 To try and find out, we are going to construct a three-dimensional model. 203 00:15:06,580 --> 00:15:11,420 To do that, we first need to have the paddles scanned. 204 00:15:11,420 --> 00:15:15,420 So, Chris is taking them to Southampton University. 205 00:15:19,140 --> 00:15:22,500 Here, the engineering department has one of the largest 206 00:15:22,500 --> 00:15:25,340 high resolution scanners in the country. 207 00:15:29,020 --> 00:15:30,700 It's not every day someone walks in 208 00:15:30,700 --> 00:15:34,060 with a 200-million-year-old sea reptile. 209 00:15:39,620 --> 00:15:44,100 The machine can scan objects of all different shapes and sizes 210 00:15:44,100 --> 00:15:48,140 from ancient coins to the components of spacecraft. 211 00:15:53,380 --> 00:15:57,500 To create a picture, the scanner takes thousands of X-ray images 212 00:15:57,500 --> 00:16:01,100 in cross sections through the fossil as it rotates. 213 00:16:06,860 --> 00:16:10,700 It's not long before the first images appear. 214 00:16:12,540 --> 00:16:15,340 That's amazing. It looks really clear. 215 00:16:16,460 --> 00:16:19,820 You can even see the bones laying underneath the paddle. 216 00:16:19,820 --> 00:16:21,860 At the moment, we're just doing one section. 217 00:16:21,860 --> 00:16:23,980 We're going to do multiple scans down the specimen 218 00:16:23,980 --> 00:16:26,620 and build it all back together into a three-dimensional volume. 219 00:16:26,620 --> 00:16:31,300 The scans of the paddles are sent to Bristol University. 220 00:16:32,620 --> 00:16:36,700 Here, scientists can isolate the image of each bone within the rock 221 00:16:36,700 --> 00:16:41,140 and then assemble them to create a detailed three-dimensional model. 222 00:16:45,220 --> 00:16:48,220 The team is particularly excited by the shape 223 00:16:48,220 --> 00:16:51,820 and structure of these paddles and I've come to find out why. 224 00:16:55,460 --> 00:16:58,580 We've got a complete paddle here taken from the bones itself, 225 00:16:58,580 --> 00:17:00,860 fully reconstructed, rearticulated 226 00:17:00,860 --> 00:17:03,700 so this is as close as we can get to what it would have looked like. 227 00:17:03,700 --> 00:17:07,180 We can actually start using this paddle to try and tell us 228 00:17:07,180 --> 00:17:08,820 what species it might have been. 229 00:17:08,820 --> 00:17:10,980 Because of the size of the paddle 230 00:17:10,980 --> 00:17:13,540 and the way that some of these bones articulate with each other, 231 00:17:13,540 --> 00:17:15,860 it's different to other ichthyosaurus 232 00:17:15,860 --> 00:17:17,940 and so this could be a new species. 233 00:17:17,940 --> 00:17:20,620 That would be great. It would be jolly exciting. 234 00:17:20,620 --> 00:17:25,060 VOICEOVER: We won't know for sure until we find the rest of the body, 235 00:17:25,060 --> 00:17:27,260 but can the paddles tell us something 236 00:17:27,260 --> 00:17:29,940 about the way in which this creature swam? 237 00:17:29,940 --> 00:17:32,340 There are a lot of bones in this paddle, 238 00:17:32,340 --> 00:17:35,020 which would have been good for holding steady 239 00:17:35,020 --> 00:17:37,820 and also for allowing it to be manoeuvrable in the water. 240 00:17:37,820 --> 00:17:40,820 There would have been cartilage round that, wouldn't there? Yes. 241 00:17:40,820 --> 00:17:42,340 All of the gaps between the bones 242 00:17:42,340 --> 00:17:44,140 would have been filled in with cartilage 243 00:17:44,140 --> 00:17:46,140 and even further around the paddle itself, 244 00:17:46,140 --> 00:17:48,580 giving it a paddle-like shape, giving it a cross section 245 00:17:48,580 --> 00:17:50,300 a bit like an aerofoil 246 00:17:50,300 --> 00:17:52,540 so that it could cut straight through the water. 247 00:17:54,300 --> 00:17:57,540 Could they fold them in to the side? Probably not. 248 00:17:57,540 --> 00:17:59,420 Looking at the muscles and where they attach, 249 00:17:59,420 --> 00:18:01,220 it suggests these are moving up and down, 250 00:18:01,220 --> 00:18:02,820 helping it to turn very quickly 251 00:18:02,820 --> 00:18:04,580 or keeping it on the straight and narrow 252 00:18:04,580 --> 00:18:07,100 when it wants to be a little more sedate. 253 00:18:11,820 --> 00:18:14,620 The shape of the paddles and the way they moved 254 00:18:14,620 --> 00:18:19,860 seems very like the way an animal alive today uses its paddles. 255 00:18:20,900 --> 00:18:23,860 That animal usually lives in tropical waters 256 00:18:23,860 --> 00:18:25,820 like these in the Caribbean. 257 00:18:27,780 --> 00:18:29,420 The sea here is warm 258 00:18:29,420 --> 00:18:31,540 with temperatures much like they would have been 259 00:18:31,540 --> 00:18:33,660 in Jurassic times around Britain. 260 00:18:35,060 --> 00:18:37,140 And the animal in question... 261 00:18:37,140 --> 00:18:40,100 is the dolphin. 262 00:18:43,580 --> 00:18:48,620 Dolphins, of course, are mammals, not reptiles like ichthyosaurs. 263 00:18:49,740 --> 00:18:54,380 Nonetheless, the two groups have bodies shaped in very similar ways. 264 00:18:56,900 --> 00:18:59,500 The front fins or paddles of both 265 00:18:59,500 --> 00:19:01,500 would have helped to steady themselves 266 00:19:01,500 --> 00:19:03,340 as they turn and cut through the water. 267 00:19:05,580 --> 00:19:08,620 And both have similar dorsal fins. 268 00:19:10,780 --> 00:19:13,500 So, although they lived 200 million years apart, 269 00:19:13,500 --> 00:19:18,780 dolphins and ichthyosaurs share many physical characteristics 270 00:19:18,780 --> 00:19:23,060 and that's because they evolved in similar ways 271 00:19:23,060 --> 00:19:25,980 as a response to a similar environment. 272 00:19:35,420 --> 00:19:36,940 Like dolphins, 273 00:19:36,940 --> 00:19:41,020 ichthyosaurs evolved from ancestors that had once lived on land. 274 00:19:41,020 --> 00:19:44,140 As they became adapted to life in water, 275 00:19:44,140 --> 00:19:46,380 they lost the ability to walk, 276 00:19:46,380 --> 00:19:48,820 their bodies became more streamlined 277 00:19:48,820 --> 00:19:52,660 and their forelimbs turned into paddles to help them swim. 278 00:19:55,140 --> 00:19:59,540 But ichthyosaurs do differ from dolphins in two striking ways. 279 00:20:05,700 --> 00:20:09,460 Dolphins have tails that are flattened horizontally 280 00:20:09,460 --> 00:20:13,900 and they drive themselves forward by beating their tails up and down. 281 00:20:15,820 --> 00:20:19,300 But we know from their fossils that ichthyosaur tails 282 00:20:19,300 --> 00:20:21,980 were flattened vertically like those of sharks, 283 00:20:21,980 --> 00:20:24,740 so they must have swum in the same sort of way 284 00:20:24,740 --> 00:20:27,420 by sweeping their tails from side to side. 285 00:20:32,340 --> 00:20:37,380 Ichthyosaurs, unlike dolphins, also had back paddles. 286 00:20:37,380 --> 00:20:41,060 They, too, would have helped stabilise them as they swam. 287 00:20:45,940 --> 00:20:49,220 And what's more, the paddles of our ichthyosaur 288 00:20:49,220 --> 00:20:51,620 are particularly large and long, 289 00:20:51,620 --> 00:20:55,620 rather like those of the oceanic whitetip shark. 290 00:20:59,940 --> 00:21:04,420 That shape helps the whitetip to cruise for long distances 291 00:21:04,420 --> 00:21:08,180 with very little expenditure of energy in their search for food. 292 00:21:12,740 --> 00:21:18,780 So, it could be that our ichthyosaur was also a long-distance traveller 293 00:21:18,780 --> 00:21:23,300 and only an infrequent visitor to the Lyme Regis seas, 294 00:21:23,300 --> 00:21:28,420 which could be why no-one has ever found one of these here before. 295 00:21:35,500 --> 00:21:39,300 Back at the dig site, the rain has stopped at last. 296 00:21:42,020 --> 00:21:46,420 But the storm is a reminder that winter is on its way. 297 00:21:47,700 --> 00:21:50,620 The team must try to extract the rest of the dragon's body 298 00:21:50,620 --> 00:21:53,180 before worse weather arrives. 299 00:21:54,820 --> 00:21:56,420 That's how hard the rock is. 300 00:21:56,420 --> 00:21:58,660 It's actually smashed the end off the chisel. 301 00:21:58,660 --> 00:22:00,740 So, you can see what we're dealing with. 302 00:22:12,060 --> 00:22:15,980 At last, they find signs of the rest of the skeleton. 303 00:22:15,980 --> 00:22:19,140 Lots and lots of bone in there. Yeah. 304 00:22:19,140 --> 00:22:22,020 Ribs and all sorts of stuff. 305 00:22:22,020 --> 00:22:25,860 And there's another particularly exciting discovery. 306 00:22:25,860 --> 00:22:29,140 Is there skin? Yeah, look. Oh, really? 307 00:22:29,140 --> 00:22:32,180 They've found signs of fossilized skin. 308 00:22:32,180 --> 00:22:33,940 Rare, isn't it? 309 00:22:33,940 --> 00:22:35,420 Yeah, very rare. 310 00:22:38,020 --> 00:22:40,900 The blocks that contain bones and skin 311 00:22:40,900 --> 00:22:43,820 can't be thrown down like the other rocks. 312 00:22:43,820 --> 00:22:48,420 They must be carefully strapped up and gently lowered. 313 00:22:50,220 --> 00:22:52,300 That's the first block down. 314 00:22:52,300 --> 00:22:55,420 A few more to go, but if they go like that, I'll be very pleased. 315 00:22:57,140 --> 00:23:02,220 Two weeks after they started work, I go down again to check on progress. 316 00:23:03,660 --> 00:23:08,980 How's it going? Well, quite well so far. A lot shifted. 317 00:23:08,980 --> 00:23:12,300 Yeah, about 20 tonnes of it, I think. Really? Yes. 318 00:23:13,180 --> 00:23:15,620 How's it doing? Is it caught? 319 00:23:15,620 --> 00:23:18,660 No, it's OK. It's OK? Yeah. 320 00:23:18,660 --> 00:23:20,620 What do you reckon's in it? 321 00:23:20,620 --> 00:23:24,460 This block's got vertebrae, the other part of the ribcage 322 00:23:24,460 --> 00:23:27,020 and it's definitely got the back paddles in there. 323 00:23:27,020 --> 00:23:29,660 You can see a cross section through them. 324 00:23:29,660 --> 00:23:32,900 VOICEOVER: While the team continue lowering the huge blocks, 325 00:23:32,900 --> 00:23:35,740 VOICEOVER: Chris shows me what they've already collected. 326 00:23:35,740 --> 00:23:38,380 So, lots over here. 327 00:23:38,380 --> 00:23:42,420 Ah, well, I can see something there. Ah! 328 00:23:42,420 --> 00:23:44,460 That's more obvious, yeah. Yeah. 329 00:23:46,580 --> 00:23:49,340 Here, you can see, glinting in the sunlight, 330 00:23:49,340 --> 00:23:52,180 sections through the backbone, the vertebral column. 331 00:23:52,180 --> 00:23:53,620 Wow! 332 00:23:53,620 --> 00:23:57,980 And these are the ribs that are still attached to the vertebrae 333 00:23:57,980 --> 00:23:59,660 and these are the neurals 334 00:23:59,660 --> 00:24:01,100 that come off the backbone. 335 00:24:01,100 --> 00:24:03,180 The spines off the top of the back. 336 00:24:03,180 --> 00:24:06,980 Yeah, but they've actually got skin preserved on them. No, really? Yeah. 337 00:24:06,980 --> 00:24:09,820 Can you see that here? Well, that's the very black. 338 00:24:09,820 --> 00:24:12,540 You can see it on the impression as well. 339 00:24:12,540 --> 00:24:16,860 VOICEOVER: This is great news, but something puzzles me. 340 00:24:16,860 --> 00:24:19,420 Would the head have been on this side or that side? 341 00:24:19,420 --> 00:24:22,740 Most likely here in this next slab. 342 00:24:24,460 --> 00:24:27,140 And it's not there? Not so far. 343 00:24:27,140 --> 00:24:29,340 Oh, boy! 344 00:24:29,340 --> 00:24:31,380 How many more tonnes to go? 345 00:24:31,380 --> 00:24:33,940 HE SIGHS, THEY LAUGH 346 00:24:36,420 --> 00:24:38,180 Only a few! THEY LAUGH 347 00:24:40,380 --> 00:24:41,980 OK. 348 00:24:50,460 --> 00:24:52,700 Once the blocks are down on the beach, 349 00:24:52,700 --> 00:24:56,220 the team remove as much excess limestone as possible 350 00:24:56,220 --> 00:24:57,780 to make them lighter. 351 00:24:57,780 --> 00:25:00,900 Even then, they're extremely heavy 352 00:25:00,900 --> 00:25:03,300 so to get them back to Lyme Regis, 353 00:25:03,300 --> 00:25:07,020 they're loaded onto a pontoon and towed back by boat. 354 00:25:25,660 --> 00:25:30,500 So, for the first time in 200 million years, 355 00:25:30,500 --> 00:25:34,660 our strange ichthyosaur once again takes to the water. 356 00:25:46,340 --> 00:25:48,340 The dig may be over, 357 00:25:48,340 --> 00:25:51,180 but the investigation is only just beginning. 358 00:25:51,180 --> 00:25:53,860 WHIRRING 359 00:25:53,860 --> 00:25:58,220 Now, the work becomes more delicate, involving not sledgehammers, 360 00:25:58,220 --> 00:26:00,460 but small vibrating chisels 361 00:26:00,460 --> 00:26:03,420 that chip off the limestone in tiny flakes. 362 00:26:08,260 --> 00:26:11,900 It's detailed work that will take months to complete. 363 00:26:14,140 --> 00:26:16,820 It's like a jigsaw puzzle of things you can't see. 364 00:26:18,340 --> 00:26:20,460 It's almost forensic. 365 00:26:22,740 --> 00:26:25,300 You don't know the story, you don't know what's inside the block 366 00:26:25,300 --> 00:26:27,340 until you reveal it. 367 00:26:29,020 --> 00:26:33,460 I've never seen in all my years an ichthyosaur that looked like this 368 00:26:33,460 --> 00:26:36,660 so every other part of the skeleton that we reveal 369 00:26:36,660 --> 00:26:40,380 is very exciting cos you're never quite sure what's going on, 370 00:26:40,380 --> 00:26:44,740 what it's going to look like and it is, it's very different. 371 00:26:47,180 --> 00:26:50,140 Day after day and week after week, 372 00:26:50,140 --> 00:26:54,820 Chris and his team work patiently to expose more of the skeleton. 373 00:26:55,940 --> 00:27:01,300 And as they do so, the bones reveal something very intriguing. 374 00:27:03,940 --> 00:27:07,300 I've come down to Chris' workshop to take a look. 375 00:27:10,740 --> 00:27:13,460 It's a bit of squeeze past the plesiosaur. 376 00:27:15,740 --> 00:27:18,580 VOICEOVER: It really is an Aladdin's cave. 377 00:27:20,180 --> 00:27:21,820 VOICEOVER; After weeks of work, 378 00:27:21,820 --> 00:27:24,660 VOICEOVER: Chris has exposed the backbones and ribs. 379 00:27:25,980 --> 00:27:28,740 So, this is it so far. 380 00:27:28,740 --> 00:27:32,180 VOICEOVER: And in doing so, he's made a startling discovery. 381 00:27:32,180 --> 00:27:34,420 It looks like it's been attacked. 382 00:27:34,420 --> 00:27:37,900 Gosh! There's breakages all through the ribcage. 383 00:27:37,900 --> 00:27:41,140 If you follow one rib, you go along here, down to here, 384 00:27:41,140 --> 00:27:45,380 then this piece corresponds to this, which then goes over to here 385 00:27:45,380 --> 00:27:50,060 so one rib is now broken into three pieces. 386 00:27:50,060 --> 00:27:54,340 How extraordinary! But what's happened here? 387 00:27:54,340 --> 00:27:59,500 Here, the vertebral column's been actually pulled away. 388 00:27:59,500 --> 00:28:03,380 I'm fairly positive it was done in life and the paddles, 389 00:28:03,380 --> 00:28:05,460 the flippers have been ripped off. 390 00:28:05,460 --> 00:28:07,500 Where would they go? 391 00:28:14,780 --> 00:28:18,300 But they're in a very odd position, aren't they? 392 00:28:18,300 --> 00:28:20,940 I mean, they're pointing in the wrong direction. 393 00:28:20,940 --> 00:28:23,740 They should be basically in this position 394 00:28:23,740 --> 00:28:25,620 and facing the other way up 395 00:28:25,620 --> 00:28:28,860 and they've been ripped off and turned over. 396 00:28:28,860 --> 00:28:30,460 Gosh! 397 00:28:31,620 --> 00:28:32,900 Well, where was the head? 398 00:28:32,900 --> 00:28:35,340 The head should be here. 399 00:28:35,340 --> 00:28:39,420 That's the very last vertebrae. Back of the neck? Yeah. 400 00:28:39,420 --> 00:28:43,340 So, the head's been torn off and there's no evidence. 401 00:28:43,340 --> 00:28:47,340 There's no teeth or pieces of bone. It's completely gone. 402 00:28:47,340 --> 00:28:52,220 So, it's a murder. Yes! Really? 403 00:28:52,220 --> 00:28:53,580 Yeah, I think it was killed. 404 00:28:53,580 --> 00:28:57,340 Did this predator crunch the head, do you think? Who knows? 405 00:28:57,340 --> 00:28:59,180 It's 200 millions years ago, 406 00:28:59,180 --> 00:29:01,980 so it's a bit of guesswork, really, isn't it? 407 00:29:01,980 --> 00:29:06,580 So, it's a murder story without a complete body yet. 408 00:29:08,900 --> 00:29:12,500 To find out more, we need to reveal the rest of the skeleton. 409 00:29:14,740 --> 00:29:17,420 So it's all hands on deck. 410 00:29:30,900 --> 00:29:33,220 They've even roped me in. 411 00:29:43,820 --> 00:29:47,660 This is more difficult than it looks. 412 00:29:52,460 --> 00:29:53,740 Very good! 413 00:29:56,060 --> 00:29:59,060 Could you start on three days a week? 414 00:30:00,260 --> 00:30:03,100 Is it all right? It's good, yeah. I haven't gone too close to the bone? 415 00:30:03,100 --> 00:30:05,660 No, no. Phew, that's a relief! 416 00:30:08,140 --> 00:30:10,580 But what of the missing head? 417 00:30:11,860 --> 00:30:13,420 If it was ripped off, 418 00:30:13,420 --> 00:30:16,340 Chris thinks he might still be able to find it 419 00:30:16,340 --> 00:30:18,460 somewhere on the beach, 420 00:30:18,460 --> 00:30:20,580 so at every opportunity, 421 00:30:20,580 --> 00:30:24,500 he scours the area where the first block was found. 422 00:30:28,380 --> 00:30:31,300 The best time to look is after a storm 423 00:30:31,300 --> 00:30:33,660 when a strong sea has moved sand and shingle 424 00:30:33,660 --> 00:30:36,260 and perhaps revealed the rocks beneath. 425 00:30:50,660 --> 00:30:55,300 To try and deduce just how our ichthyosaur met its fate, 426 00:30:55,300 --> 00:31:00,020 we've sent images of the fossil to someone who specialises 427 00:31:00,020 --> 00:31:04,060 in investigating the cause of death in prehistoric animals. 428 00:31:05,700 --> 00:31:08,660 You sent me some photographs and I had a look at some of these breaks. 429 00:31:08,660 --> 00:31:11,580 Now, first of all, I noticed this, here. 430 00:31:11,580 --> 00:31:14,820 If you look, you can just see this bulbous piece on the rib here. 431 00:31:14,820 --> 00:31:17,420 This is where the rib has healed after a break 432 00:31:17,420 --> 00:31:20,300 and the animal's gone on to live another day. 433 00:31:20,300 --> 00:31:24,980 There's a bite mark here that runs all the way up the paddle bones. 434 00:31:24,980 --> 00:31:26,700 You can see that it's healed as well. 435 00:31:26,700 --> 00:31:28,620 Yeah, it's definitely an old injury. 436 00:31:28,620 --> 00:31:32,500 This animal's had a little bit of a bad start in life. Yeah. 437 00:31:32,500 --> 00:31:36,140 But some of the other breaks tell a different story. 438 00:31:36,140 --> 00:31:39,540 If you look down here and especially this one, 439 00:31:39,540 --> 00:31:42,660 this fracture here mirrors that fracture there 440 00:31:42,660 --> 00:31:46,660 and then we can see a whole line of fractures 441 00:31:46,660 --> 00:31:49,340 where there's no new bone growth. 442 00:31:49,340 --> 00:31:52,540 Something has actually crushed this ribcage. 443 00:31:52,540 --> 00:31:55,020 So look here at these neural spines. 444 00:31:55,020 --> 00:31:57,260 These are absolutely perfect 445 00:31:57,260 --> 00:32:01,540 and then from here, they're broken all the way down to here. 446 00:32:01,540 --> 00:32:03,900 This is the last one that's broken and then here, 447 00:32:03,900 --> 00:32:05,380 they're perfect again. 448 00:32:05,380 --> 00:32:09,140 So, there to there is damaged. 449 00:32:09,140 --> 00:32:12,660 On the ribs, there to there is damaged and here, too, 450 00:32:12,660 --> 00:32:15,060 and also on some of these belly ribs 451 00:32:15,060 --> 00:32:19,020 so I think there's a bite which goes right across here. 452 00:32:19,020 --> 00:32:24,460 That probably reflects the width of the skull of the animal that bit it. 453 00:32:24,460 --> 00:32:27,340 Yeah, yeah. So it came in across here, almost. 454 00:32:27,340 --> 00:32:28,980 Somewhere like that, yeah. 455 00:32:28,980 --> 00:32:32,820 There was a massive bite, it caused catastrophic injury 456 00:32:32,820 --> 00:32:35,700 and, remember, the ribcage is protecting lungs. 457 00:32:35,700 --> 00:32:40,580 This was an air-breathing marine animal and as a swimmer, 458 00:32:40,580 --> 00:32:43,980 these lungs are vital not just for breathing, but for its buoyancy. 459 00:32:43,980 --> 00:32:47,660 So, once this ribcage is punctured and the lungs are punctured, 460 00:32:47,660 --> 00:32:49,100 this animal is dead. 461 00:32:49,100 --> 00:32:50,300 It can't breathe 462 00:32:50,300 --> 00:32:53,020 and also it's going to sink straight down to the sea floor as well. 463 00:32:53,020 --> 00:32:57,580 It's quite likely that the animal that killed this animal, 464 00:32:57,580 --> 00:32:59,620 presumably it was looking for food, 465 00:32:59,620 --> 00:33:01,220 it didn't get to eat it. 466 00:33:01,220 --> 00:33:03,300 Oh, no, I think it just killed it. 467 00:33:03,300 --> 00:33:05,300 It didn't eat it, or else it wouldn't be so intact. 468 00:33:05,300 --> 00:33:08,380 So this probably all took place in the surface water, 469 00:33:08,380 --> 00:33:10,380 but as soon as it's done this injury, 470 00:33:10,380 --> 00:33:13,780 this thing just sank like a stone straight down to the sea floor 471 00:33:13,780 --> 00:33:17,500 and then it was lost to the animal that was trying to eat it. 472 00:33:17,500 --> 00:33:21,540 So, it looks as if Chris' attack theory might be right. 473 00:33:22,780 --> 00:33:25,820 But what type of creature could possibly have inflicted 474 00:33:25,820 --> 00:33:28,660 so much damage to our sea dragon? 475 00:33:30,300 --> 00:33:35,020 A rather unusual fossil in Chris' collection might give us a clue. 476 00:33:40,900 --> 00:33:48,340 This is fossilised ichthyosaur droppings called a coprolite 477 00:33:48,340 --> 00:33:50,580 and what makes it particularly interesting 478 00:33:50,580 --> 00:33:56,580 is that within this piece of dung, you can see fish scales. 479 00:33:59,660 --> 00:34:03,900 So, that shows that ichthyosaurs were fish eaters, 480 00:34:03,900 --> 00:34:09,700 but more than that, this one is even more interesting 481 00:34:09,700 --> 00:34:17,020 because in this piece of dung, there are teeth - ichthyosaur teeth. 482 00:34:17,020 --> 00:34:23,300 So, the animal that produced this was almost certainly a cannibal. 483 00:34:23,300 --> 00:34:27,060 It ate other ichthyosaur species. 484 00:34:28,620 --> 00:34:32,660 Could it be that our dragon was killed by one of its own kind? 485 00:34:40,380 --> 00:34:42,420 To find out more, 486 00:34:42,420 --> 00:34:46,420 I've come to the Natural History Museum of Stuttgart in Germany. 487 00:34:49,860 --> 00:34:52,780 Here, they have one of the most impressive 488 00:34:52,780 --> 00:34:56,820 and varied collections of ichthyosaurs in the world. 489 00:34:59,420 --> 00:35:02,300 They came in all shapes and sizes, 490 00:35:02,300 --> 00:35:07,820 but of all the ichthyosaurs that existed 200 million years ago, 491 00:35:07,820 --> 00:35:11,860 there was one which was particularly fearsome. 492 00:35:21,260 --> 00:35:24,060 This is temnodontosaurus, 493 00:35:24,060 --> 00:35:27,620 one of the biggest of the sea dragons so far discovered. 494 00:35:27,620 --> 00:35:30,540 They grew up to 10m long 495 00:35:30,540 --> 00:35:34,380 and individual bones have been discovered which suggest 496 00:35:34,380 --> 00:35:37,660 that they could grow even bigger than that. 497 00:35:39,260 --> 00:35:42,020 The remains of these terrifying sea monsters 498 00:35:42,020 --> 00:35:45,460 were discovered in a quarry just outside Stuttgart. 499 00:35:45,460 --> 00:35:50,980 These are the biggest complete temnodontosaurus fossils ever found. 500 00:35:53,860 --> 00:36:01,220 This huge predator had the largest eye known of any animal, 501 00:36:01,220 --> 00:36:04,500 which would have given it extremely acute eyesight. 502 00:36:04,500 --> 00:36:07,700 Not only that, but the eye was surrounded 503 00:36:07,700 --> 00:36:10,900 by a ring of scutes - bony plates - 504 00:36:10,900 --> 00:36:14,380 to protect it from the water pressure at depth. 505 00:36:16,420 --> 00:36:19,100 So, with eyes the size of footballs, 506 00:36:19,100 --> 00:36:24,140 this monster was able to hunt at all depths of the Jurassic ocean. 507 00:36:33,260 --> 00:36:37,780 It also had rows of sharp teeth 508 00:36:37,780 --> 00:36:40,740 that would have allowed it to rip apart almost anything. 509 00:36:43,260 --> 00:36:48,740 These teeth are shaped like blades, well suited for cutting into flesh. 510 00:36:51,180 --> 00:36:55,260 And here's another specimen of temnodontosaurus 511 00:36:55,260 --> 00:36:58,900 that is proof positive that it really was a hunter. 512 00:37:00,020 --> 00:37:03,980 Here is its stomach and inside its stomach, 513 00:37:03,980 --> 00:37:07,940 you can see these tiny little circular bones, 514 00:37:07,940 --> 00:37:12,900 which are the backbones, the vertebrae, of a baby ichthyosaur. 515 00:37:14,540 --> 00:37:18,260 So we now know that temnodontosaurus 516 00:37:18,260 --> 00:37:20,820 could devour young ichthyosaurs, 517 00:37:20,820 --> 00:37:23,420 but would one have been capable 518 00:37:23,420 --> 00:37:26,700 of eating an adult ichthyosaur like ours? 519 00:37:28,380 --> 00:37:32,140 Fossils of temnodontosaurus have been found in other regions, 520 00:37:32,140 --> 00:37:34,860 including our own Jurassic Coast. 521 00:37:37,380 --> 00:37:41,860 So, this monster could well be our prime suspect. 522 00:37:43,500 --> 00:37:45,780 To build our case further, 523 00:37:45,780 --> 00:37:49,460 we're going to analyse another specimen of the same species 524 00:37:49,460 --> 00:37:52,180 that was found on the Jurassic Coast. 525 00:37:54,140 --> 00:37:57,820 This is the skull of a temnodontosaurus 526 00:37:57,820 --> 00:38:01,500 and as you can see, it's huge. 527 00:38:01,500 --> 00:38:04,460 This specimen was found by Mary Anning 528 00:38:04,460 --> 00:38:08,180 on the Dorset coast in the 19th century 529 00:38:08,180 --> 00:38:10,820 and we are hoping that we may be able to use it 530 00:38:10,820 --> 00:38:13,460 with the latest techniques 531 00:38:13,460 --> 00:38:18,820 to tell us just how powerful these great jaws could be. 532 00:38:18,820 --> 00:38:22,580 So, for the first time ever, our team of scientists 533 00:38:22,580 --> 00:38:24,780 are going to attempt to calculate 534 00:38:24,780 --> 00:38:28,460 the bite strength of a temnodontosaurus. 535 00:38:29,700 --> 00:38:32,540 The first step is to scan the skull. 536 00:38:35,380 --> 00:38:37,860 Not as easy as it sounds. 537 00:38:37,860 --> 00:38:39,820 Very few scanners are big enough, 538 00:38:39,820 --> 00:38:42,540 but there's one here at the Royal Veterinary College, 539 00:38:42,540 --> 00:38:45,500 where they're more accustomed to scanning horses. 540 00:38:51,260 --> 00:38:57,300 The temnodontosaurus skull is 2m long and weighs more than 200kg. 541 00:38:59,060 --> 00:39:01,380 Luckily, it's in two pieces. 542 00:39:01,380 --> 00:39:05,580 Otherwise it couldn't be fitted into even this huge scanner. 543 00:39:07,300 --> 00:39:09,420 OK. One, two, three and up. 544 00:39:22,540 --> 00:39:24,980 These scans will help the team 545 00:39:24,980 --> 00:39:28,660 to not only reconstruct the temnodontosaurus' skull, 546 00:39:28,660 --> 00:39:32,380 but also work out the size of its jaw muscles. 547 00:39:32,380 --> 00:39:36,020 They can then assess the power of this huge predator's bite 548 00:39:36,020 --> 00:39:40,700 and see if it was strong enough to kill our ichthyosaur. 549 00:39:42,380 --> 00:39:44,460 Temnodontosaurs are unusual 550 00:39:44,460 --> 00:39:48,540 in that they had huge, sharp teeth for cutting through flesh, 551 00:39:48,540 --> 00:39:52,340 but how did other ichthyosaurs catch their prey? 552 00:39:52,340 --> 00:39:57,020 To get a clue, I've come to see a modern day predator in action. 553 00:40:08,020 --> 00:40:15,020 That is a gharial crocodile from Indonesia. 554 00:40:17,100 --> 00:40:20,380 Its jaws, as you can see, are not wide and flat 555 00:40:20,380 --> 00:40:22,660 like an African crocodile's, 556 00:40:22,660 --> 00:40:26,100 but long and thin and because of that shape, 557 00:40:26,100 --> 00:40:28,380 there's very little resistance to the water 558 00:40:28,380 --> 00:40:32,580 so they can snatch fish, which they do very effectively. 559 00:40:35,100 --> 00:40:38,660 They're very formidable animals indeed. 560 00:40:55,300 --> 00:40:59,100 Ichthyosaurs must have fed in much the same way as that. 561 00:40:59,100 --> 00:41:03,220 Their jaws were very similar to those of the gharial - 562 00:41:03,220 --> 00:41:08,420 simple studs to grip the prey, no need to chew it 563 00:41:08,420 --> 00:41:11,020 because the jaws at the back were quite big enough 564 00:41:11,020 --> 00:41:13,820 to enable the animal to swallow their prey whole, 565 00:41:13,820 --> 00:41:15,820 just as the gharial does. 566 00:41:22,140 --> 00:41:24,980 Gharials regularly shed their teeth 567 00:41:24,980 --> 00:41:28,020 and here's one I've just picked out of this pool. 568 00:41:28,020 --> 00:41:33,140 You can see that they're very simple teeth, just like ichthyosaur teeth. 569 00:41:33,140 --> 00:41:37,380 But that's all you need if all you have to do is to grab a fish. 570 00:41:45,940 --> 00:41:51,220 So, it's likely that our ichthyosaur had teeth and jaws specially adapted 571 00:41:51,220 --> 00:41:54,180 to catch small, slippery fish and squid, 572 00:41:54,180 --> 00:41:57,700 just like a gharial crocodile. 573 00:42:01,820 --> 00:42:07,020 Back in Lyme Regis, the work on the bones has taken a dramatic turn. 574 00:42:09,580 --> 00:42:13,300 Chris has found that there is fossilized skin 575 00:42:13,300 --> 00:42:15,780 over nearly the whole skeleton. 576 00:42:15,780 --> 00:42:18,300 It seems to be virtually covering the whole thing. 577 00:42:19,860 --> 00:42:23,060 It's rare to find any sign whatever of skin on fossils, 578 00:42:23,060 --> 00:42:24,820 let alone so much of it. 579 00:42:26,540 --> 00:42:30,020 Fiann Smithwick, an expert on fossilized skin, 580 00:42:30,020 --> 00:42:32,860 has come to take a sample back to his lab. 581 00:42:32,860 --> 00:42:34,900 We can look and see if there's any evidence 582 00:42:34,900 --> 00:42:36,900 of the original pigment preserved in the skin. 583 00:42:36,900 --> 00:42:41,180 Oh, that's a lovely piece. That's really good. That'll be perfect. 584 00:42:41,180 --> 00:42:44,900 Fiann hopes that this remarkably preserved sample 585 00:42:44,900 --> 00:42:48,780 might tell us what the skin looked like and even what colour it was. 586 00:42:50,300 --> 00:42:52,500 At the University of Bristol, 587 00:42:52,500 --> 00:42:57,300 he places a tiny sample of the fossilized skin in a machine 588 00:42:57,300 --> 00:43:01,060 that coats its surface with minute particles of gold. 589 00:43:12,980 --> 00:43:17,340 They will reflect the rays of a scanning electron microscope. 590 00:43:20,900 --> 00:43:23,940 It's astonishing that you can actually see 591 00:43:23,940 --> 00:43:26,660 the remains of skin on such an ancient fossil. 592 00:43:31,820 --> 00:43:34,860 But this microscope can also magnify its structure 593 00:43:34,860 --> 00:43:37,260 tens of thousands of times. 594 00:43:46,140 --> 00:43:49,420 Here, we have an exceptional level of preservation of the skin 595 00:43:49,420 --> 00:43:52,140 of our ichthyosaur, despite being 200 million years old, 596 00:43:52,140 --> 00:43:53,820 so the structures we're looking at here 597 00:43:53,820 --> 00:43:56,340 are around half a micrometre across 598 00:43:56,340 --> 00:43:58,460 and a micrometre is one millionth of a metre 599 00:43:58,460 --> 00:44:01,380 and you see here these little granules 600 00:44:01,380 --> 00:44:04,260 and these are preserved melanosomes. 601 00:44:04,260 --> 00:44:08,500 Now, melanosomes contain the pigment that you have in mammal hair, 602 00:44:08,500 --> 00:44:12,180 in bird feathers and in reptile skin and the abundance of them 603 00:44:12,180 --> 00:44:13,820 and the distribution of them can tell us 604 00:44:13,820 --> 00:44:15,980 about the overall colour patterns of the animal. 605 00:44:15,980 --> 00:44:18,500 So, having a high abundance means you're likely to be darker 606 00:44:18,500 --> 00:44:20,900 and having a low abundance means you're likely to be lighter. 607 00:44:20,900 --> 00:44:24,260 This area has come from the back. 608 00:44:24,260 --> 00:44:26,380 There's a large abundance of these melanosomes. 609 00:44:26,380 --> 00:44:27,500 There's a lot of pigment here 610 00:44:27,500 --> 00:44:28,820 and when we look at samples 611 00:44:28,820 --> 00:44:31,220 that have come from the bottom of the animal, 612 00:44:31,220 --> 00:44:34,340 we don't see this pigment in this level of abundance 613 00:44:34,340 --> 00:44:37,940 so it most likely had a much darker back than it did a belly 614 00:44:37,940 --> 00:44:40,220 and this conforms to a type of colour pattern 615 00:44:40,220 --> 00:44:42,340 known as countershading in modern animals. 616 00:44:44,060 --> 00:44:48,220 You can see countershading in lots of sea animals today. 617 00:44:48,220 --> 00:44:50,540 Great white sharks, for example. 618 00:44:56,260 --> 00:44:59,940 Both predators and prey are coloured in this way. 619 00:44:59,940 --> 00:45:04,060 It makes them more difficult to see both from above and below. 620 00:45:06,620 --> 00:45:08,860 So, this is the first time that we've actually seen 621 00:45:08,860 --> 00:45:11,700 evidence of a countershaded pattern in an ichthyosaur. 622 00:45:11,700 --> 00:45:14,820 So, that really is a step forward in our knowledge. 623 00:45:14,820 --> 00:45:16,580 It is and it can tell us 624 00:45:16,580 --> 00:45:19,220 a huge amount about the way the animal might have lived. 625 00:45:19,220 --> 00:45:20,660 Just from looking at that picture? 626 00:45:20,660 --> 00:45:24,460 Just from looking at these melanosomes. Great! 627 00:45:27,940 --> 00:45:32,020 Today, countershaded animals tend to live in open water 628 00:45:32,020 --> 00:45:33,940 where there's good visibility. 629 00:45:36,300 --> 00:45:39,180 Ichthyosaurs also lived in the open seas 630 00:45:39,180 --> 00:45:41,340 so being camouflaged in this way 631 00:45:41,340 --> 00:45:43,460 would have been very valuable to them. 632 00:45:49,020 --> 00:45:53,140 The latest scientific research suggests that countershading 633 00:45:53,140 --> 00:45:56,860 might also protect against ultraviolet light 634 00:45:56,860 --> 00:45:59,820 and even help to regulate body temperature. 635 00:46:03,940 --> 00:46:06,140 As an air-breathing creature, 636 00:46:06,140 --> 00:46:10,980 our ichthyosaur would have had to spend much time near the surface. 637 00:46:10,980 --> 00:46:14,860 So countershading could have been a benefit for that reason as well. 638 00:46:23,380 --> 00:46:25,020 There are, of course, 639 00:46:25,020 --> 00:46:30,700 many marine reptiles still living in the oceans today, like turtles. 640 00:46:33,220 --> 00:46:36,620 The biggest of them is the leatherback, 641 00:46:36,620 --> 00:46:39,060 whose ancestors, in fact, were around 642 00:46:39,060 --> 00:46:41,380 at the same time as the ichthyosaurs. 643 00:46:42,500 --> 00:46:45,780 Today, they come ashore to nest in many places, 644 00:46:45,780 --> 00:46:47,580 including the Caribbean. 645 00:46:49,140 --> 00:46:54,700 This huge leatherback turtle is laying her eggs. 646 00:46:54,700 --> 00:46:59,420 She's hauled her way up from the sea and dug a hole 647 00:46:59,420 --> 00:47:03,140 and now she's depositing about 100 of them. 648 00:47:04,860 --> 00:47:06,860 She'll then fill in the hole 649 00:47:06,860 --> 00:47:11,300 and then work her way down back to the sea. 650 00:47:12,980 --> 00:47:15,580 It's clearly a very laborious process. 651 00:47:17,420 --> 00:47:21,500 And that's the challenge facing all reptiles that live in the sea - 652 00:47:21,500 --> 00:47:24,980 having to come onto land to lay eggs. 653 00:47:27,300 --> 00:47:31,940 Ichthyosaurs were reptiles and they lived in the sea, 654 00:47:31,940 --> 00:47:35,060 but they were so well adapted to a life at sea, 655 00:47:35,060 --> 00:47:38,980 that they gave birth to live young 656 00:47:38,980 --> 00:47:41,020 and that would have saved the sea dragons 657 00:47:41,020 --> 00:47:44,020 making the dangerous journey onto land. 658 00:47:47,420 --> 00:47:50,900 There is remarkable evidence that ichthyosaurs gave birth 659 00:47:50,900 --> 00:47:53,580 to live young in the Stuttgart museum. 660 00:48:20,620 --> 00:48:26,900 And here is a truly extraordinary, beautiful, almost poignant fossil - 661 00:48:26,900 --> 00:48:32,540 proof positive that ichthyosaurs gave birth to live young. 662 00:48:33,900 --> 00:48:39,500 Here is the baby, just at the moment that it's leaving the birth canal. 663 00:48:39,500 --> 00:48:44,580 It comes out tail first and as soon as it was freed, 664 00:48:44,580 --> 00:48:48,860 it would have risen to the surface to take its first breath. 665 00:48:48,860 --> 00:48:52,260 But something happened before that did 666 00:48:52,260 --> 00:48:54,860 and here is the proof. 667 00:48:56,580 --> 00:49:00,580 Whatever it was, death must have been instant. 668 00:49:03,580 --> 00:49:06,700 So, ichthyosaurs gave birth to live babies, 669 00:49:06,700 --> 00:49:09,540 just as many sharks do today. 670 00:49:30,180 --> 00:49:33,060 After several weeks of research, 671 00:49:33,060 --> 00:49:35,500 the team at Bristol University have managed 672 00:49:35,500 --> 00:49:39,780 to reconstruct the skull of the temnodontosaurus 673 00:49:39,780 --> 00:49:42,700 so that they can analyse the power of its jaws. 674 00:49:44,300 --> 00:49:47,220 How do you assess the strength of this animal's bite? 675 00:49:47,220 --> 00:49:49,060 Well, the first thing that we need to know 676 00:49:49,060 --> 00:49:52,020 is the volume of muscle that could fit into the back of the skull. 677 00:49:52,020 --> 00:49:53,620 So the muscles are attaching round here 678 00:49:53,620 --> 00:49:55,180 and also there's a group of muscles 679 00:49:55,180 --> 00:49:57,300 that are attaching further forward here 680 00:49:57,300 --> 00:49:59,300 and if we know how much muscle volume there is, 681 00:49:59,300 --> 00:50:01,540 we can estimate how much force that muscle can generate. 682 00:50:01,540 --> 00:50:03,100 And what did you discover? 683 00:50:03,100 --> 00:50:06,020 We found out that our upper estimate of bite force 684 00:50:06,020 --> 00:50:09,660 was around 30,000 Newtons and to put that in a modern day context, 685 00:50:09,660 --> 00:50:13,540 that's twice as powerful as the largest saltwater crocodile 686 00:50:13,540 --> 00:50:15,980 that's been measured. Twice as powerful? Yeah. 687 00:50:15,980 --> 00:50:19,420 So that's enormous, yeah. Yeah, it's a very powerful bite force. 688 00:50:27,980 --> 00:50:30,740 So, this must have been the animal 689 00:50:30,740 --> 00:50:33,620 with the most powerful bite of its time, mustn't it? 690 00:50:33,620 --> 00:50:35,260 That's absolutely right, yeah. 691 00:50:35,260 --> 00:50:36,900 Of its time, it would have been. 692 00:50:36,900 --> 00:50:38,940 Not only did it have a powerful bite, 693 00:50:38,940 --> 00:50:41,780 its jaw-closing muscles also attach quite close to the jaw joint. 694 00:50:41,780 --> 00:50:44,020 Now, normally in animals where that happens, 695 00:50:44,020 --> 00:50:46,740 they have quite a fast, but less forceful bite, 696 00:50:46,740 --> 00:50:49,300 but the fact that this animal is actually so big 697 00:50:49,300 --> 00:50:50,900 means that it has a fast bite, 698 00:50:50,900 --> 00:50:52,740 but also by virtue of its sheer size, 699 00:50:52,740 --> 00:50:54,980 it also has quite a powerful bite as well, too, 700 00:50:54,980 --> 00:50:56,900 so it basically has the best of both worlds. 701 00:50:56,900 --> 00:51:00,260 So, this was the king of the Jurassic sea. Or queen! 702 00:51:00,260 --> 00:51:01,660 Sorry! 703 00:51:04,020 --> 00:51:06,340 Yeah. Yeah. 704 00:51:07,900 --> 00:51:12,540 So, it seems fairly likely that temnodontosaurus was strong enough 705 00:51:12,540 --> 00:51:17,300 not only to kill our sea dragon, but to rip its head clean off. 706 00:51:20,620 --> 00:51:22,820 It must have been a terrifying battle. 707 00:52:02,620 --> 00:52:05,500 Our investigations have given us 708 00:52:05,500 --> 00:52:09,700 a pretty good idea of how our sea dragon died. 709 00:52:11,940 --> 00:52:14,140 But can the reconstruction work 710 00:52:14,140 --> 00:52:19,460 carried out at Bristol University tell us more about its life? 711 00:52:21,380 --> 00:52:25,300 All the blocks containing the fossil have now been scanned. 712 00:52:25,300 --> 00:52:26,820 With those scans, 713 00:52:26,820 --> 00:52:30,100 the team were able to separate the individual bones 714 00:52:30,100 --> 00:52:32,500 and then put them back together to create 715 00:52:32,500 --> 00:52:36,740 a 3D image of the ichthyosaur's body before it was attacked. 716 00:52:39,580 --> 00:52:41,020 They've added a head 717 00:52:41,020 --> 00:52:44,380 based on estimates of other ichthyosaur species. 718 00:52:47,100 --> 00:52:49,220 That's magnificent. 719 00:52:49,220 --> 00:52:50,580 This is the whole animal 720 00:52:50,580 --> 00:52:54,820 and we estimate that it may have been up to around 4.5m long. 721 00:52:54,820 --> 00:52:56,420 Is that bigger than most in Lyme? 722 00:52:56,420 --> 00:52:57,740 Yes, this is certainly bigger 723 00:52:57,740 --> 00:53:00,300 than most of the ichthyosaurs that we see at Lyme Regis. 724 00:53:00,300 --> 00:53:02,380 It looks huge. It looks amazing. 725 00:53:02,380 --> 00:53:04,660 Here are the forelimbs right at the front 726 00:53:04,660 --> 00:53:07,860 and we've got hindlimbs here and at the back, we've got a tail bend. 727 00:53:07,860 --> 00:53:10,060 This is supported by the backbone, 728 00:53:10,060 --> 00:53:12,300 which extends along the whole length of the body. 729 00:53:12,300 --> 00:53:15,420 But that bend is natural, isn't it? That's not a break. Yes. 730 00:53:15,420 --> 00:53:17,980 That gives strength to the lower element of the tail 731 00:53:17,980 --> 00:53:19,180 for driving it forward. 732 00:53:19,180 --> 00:53:20,820 Much like a shark, 733 00:53:20,820 --> 00:53:24,140 the tail bend is the main propulsive organ of the animal. 734 00:53:24,140 --> 00:53:26,780 So, could this be a new species? 735 00:53:26,780 --> 00:53:29,380 Yes, these pieces of evidence together 736 00:53:29,380 --> 00:53:33,020 suggest that it is going to be a new species and it's jolly exciting. 737 00:53:33,020 --> 00:53:35,860 They don't come along every day. Historic! Yes. 738 00:53:37,700 --> 00:53:40,340 This is wonderful news. 739 00:53:40,340 --> 00:53:43,260 A sighting by Chris on the beach in Lyme Regis 740 00:53:43,260 --> 00:53:46,820 has led to the discovery of a new species of ichthyosaur, 741 00:53:46,820 --> 00:53:50,260 adding to our knowledge of these fascinating creatures. 742 00:53:51,500 --> 00:53:56,220 It's extraordinary how much you can discover from one single fossil. 743 00:53:56,220 --> 00:53:59,420 Digital reconstruction has allowed us 744 00:53:59,420 --> 00:54:04,300 to rebuild this animal to reveal how it looked and how it moved. 745 00:54:04,300 --> 00:54:06,940 We've discovered, for the first time, 746 00:54:06,940 --> 00:54:10,340 that this creature was countershaded. 747 00:54:10,340 --> 00:54:12,820 But that didn't stop it from being attacked. 748 00:54:13,860 --> 00:54:16,500 By analysing its bones, 749 00:54:16,500 --> 00:54:19,540 we've been able to work out that its most likely attacker 750 00:54:19,540 --> 00:54:21,380 was a temnodontosaurus, 751 00:54:21,380 --> 00:54:24,820 the most ferocious predator of the seas at that time. 752 00:54:28,900 --> 00:54:33,140 It's been a fascinating journey of discovery, but, for me, 753 00:54:33,140 --> 00:54:36,820 the real wonder is the bones themselves. 754 00:54:36,820 --> 00:54:40,940 I can't wait to see what they look like when they're finally cleaned. 755 00:54:53,580 --> 00:54:58,340 After many months of painstaking and patient preparation, 756 00:54:58,340 --> 00:55:01,820 Chris and his team have finally completed their work 757 00:55:01,820 --> 00:55:04,420 on the fossil of our ancient sea dragon. 758 00:55:15,980 --> 00:55:17,580 Here it is finished. 759 00:55:20,100 --> 00:55:22,100 Wow! 760 00:55:22,100 --> 00:55:25,020 It's really beautiful, isn't it? 761 00:55:25,020 --> 00:55:28,460 I mean, it is beautiful, that's for sure. Thank you. 762 00:55:28,460 --> 00:55:31,300 It's a great specimen, isn't it? Lovely. 763 00:55:31,300 --> 00:55:35,700 And how many new species have been discovered in the last 100 years? 764 00:55:35,700 --> 00:55:38,140 Very few, very, very few 765 00:55:38,140 --> 00:55:42,380 and it's thrilling to find something that's just never been seen before. 766 00:55:44,740 --> 00:55:47,340 Well, it was a long time spent 767 00:55:47,340 --> 00:55:50,740 just revealing the body of this creature, 768 00:55:50,740 --> 00:55:54,140 but it's also revealed this extraordinary story 769 00:55:54,140 --> 00:55:56,500 of life and death, 770 00:55:56,500 --> 00:56:00,500 predator-prey fighting it out in the seas 771 00:56:00,500 --> 00:56:04,140 200 million years ago just down there. 772 00:56:04,140 --> 00:56:07,060 Yeah, it's a fantastic story. 773 00:56:07,060 --> 00:56:10,420 Really, really thrilling and romantic. 774 00:56:13,300 --> 00:56:16,700 For Chris, this has been a labour of love 775 00:56:16,700 --> 00:56:21,780 and it's filled in another gap in the palaeontological jigsaw - 776 00:56:21,780 --> 00:56:24,140 a story that all started 777 00:56:24,140 --> 00:56:28,580 with an odd-looking boulder on a Dorset beach. 778 00:56:28,580 --> 00:56:30,140 It's extraordinary to think 779 00:56:30,140 --> 00:56:36,260 that some 200 million years ago exactly here, 780 00:56:36,260 --> 00:56:42,020 the greatest predator of its time was swimming around in the sea 781 00:56:42,020 --> 00:56:46,180 and that's what I really love about fossils and fossil hunting. 782 00:56:46,180 --> 00:56:50,300 It gives you an extraordinarily vivid insight 783 00:56:50,300 --> 00:56:55,140 into what the world was like millions of years before 784 00:56:55,140 --> 00:56:58,140 human beings even appeared on this planet. 785 00:57:04,900 --> 00:57:09,900 Ichthyosaurs died out around 90 million years ago. 786 00:57:09,900 --> 00:57:12,180 No-one knows why, 787 00:57:12,180 --> 00:57:17,260 but standing here and having excavated that spectacular fossil, 788 00:57:17,260 --> 00:57:19,700 it's not difficult to imagine a time 789 00:57:19,700 --> 00:57:24,060 when dragons really did rule the seas. 67168

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