Would you like to inspect the original subtitles? 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
Can't find what you're looking for?
Get subtitles in any language from opensubtitles.com, and translate them here.