Close Menu
Ztoog
    What's Hot
    Mobile

    SpaceX’s Starlink set to launch satellite phone service in 2024

    Crypto

    Analyst Sets $45,000 Target And It’s Closer Than You Think

    Technology

    A US judge rejects X's bid to overturn a May 2022 FTC order imposing restrictions on its data security practices and declines to stop a deposition of Elon Musk (Joseph Menn/Washington Post)

    Important Pages:
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Ztoog
    • Home
    • The Future

      What is Project Management? 5 Best Tools that You Can Try

      Operational excellence strategy and continuous improvement

      Hannah Fry: AI isn’t as powerful as we think

      FanDuel goes all in on responsible gaming push with new Play with a Plan campaign

      Gettyimages.com Is the Best Website on the Internet Right Now

    • Technology

      Iran war: How could it end?

      Democratic senators question CFTC staffing cuts in Chicago enforcement office

      Google’s Cloud AI lead on the three frontiers of model capability

      AMD agrees to backstop a $300M loan from Goldman Sachs for Crusoe to buy AMD AI chips, the first known case of AMD chips used as debt collateral (The Information)

      Productivity apps failed me when I needed them most

    • Gadgets

      macOS Tahoe 26.3.1 update will “upgrade” your M5’s CPU to new “super” cores

      Lenovo Shows Off a ThinkBook Modular AI PC Concept With Swappable Ports and Detachable Displays at MWC 2026

      POCO M8 Review: The Ultimate Budget Smartphone With Some Cons

      The Mission: Impossible of SSDs has arrived with a fingerprint lock

      6 Best Phones With Headphone Jacks (2026), Tested and Reviewed

    • Mobile

      Android’s March update is all about finding people, apps, and your missing bags

      Watch Xiaomi’s global launch event live here

      Our poll shows what buyers actually care about in new smartphones (Hint: it’s not AI)

      Is Strava down for you? You’re not alone

      The Motorola Razr FIFA World Cup 2026 Edition was literally just unveiled, and Verizon is already giving them away

    • Science

      Big Tech Signs White House Data Center Pledge With Good Optics and Little Substance

      Inside the best dark matter detector ever built

      NASA’s Artemis moon exploration programme is getting a major makeover

      Scientists crack the case of “screeching” Scotch tape

      Blue-faced, puffy-lipped monkey scores a rare conservation win

    • AI

      Online harassment is entering its AI era

      Meet NullClaw: The 678 KB Zig AI Agent Framework Running on 1 MB RAM and Booting in Two Milliseconds

      New method could increase LLM training efficiency | Ztoog

      The human work behind humanoid robots is being hidden

      NVIDIA Releases DreamDojo: An Open-Source Robot World Model Trained on 44,711 Hours of Real-World Human Video Data

    • Crypto

      Google paid startup Form Energy $1B for its massive 100-hour battery

      Ethereum Breakout Alert: Corrective Channel Flip Sparks Impulsive Wave

      Show Your ID Or No Deal

      Jane Street sued for alleged front-running trades that accelerated Terraform Labs meltdown

      Bitcoin Trades Below ETF Cost-Basis As MVRV Signals Mounting Pressure

    Ztoog
    Home » This giant polar reptile once stalked an ancient super-ocean
    Science

    This giant polar reptile once stalked an ancient super-ocean

    Facebook Twitter Pinterest WhatsApp
    This giant polar reptile once stalked an ancient super-ocean
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest WhatsApp

    In immediately’s oceans, sea turtles, marine iguanas, saltwater crocodiles, and sea snakes are the first reptilian residents amongst tons of mammals and fish. This was not all the time the case, as fossil proof reveals that about 252 million years in the past reptiles dominated the seas. Now, an worldwide group of scientists have put collectively one other piece of this puzzle and recognized the oldest fossil of a sea-dwelling reptile from the Southern Hemisphere. The vertebra fossil belonged to the ocean dragon-like nothosaurus and was present in a stream mattress on New Zealand’s South Island. The findings are described in a research printed June 17 within the journal Current Biology.

    [Related: New species of extinct marine reptile found with help from 11-year-old child.]

    When reptiles dominated the seas

    Millions of years earlier than dinosaurs roamed the Earth, reptiles have been the kings of Earth’s seas. 

    The most numerous and geologically longest surviving group of those extinct marine reptiles are the sauropterygians. They have an evolutionary historical past spanning over 180 million years. Sauropterygians included the long-necked plesiosaurs–which appeared like the favored picture of the Loch Ness Monster.

    Reconstruction of the New Zealand nothosaur. The oldest sea-going reptile from the Southern Hemisphere. Artwork by Johan Egerkrans. CREDIT: Johan Egerkrans.

    The nothosaur was a distant predecessor of the plesiosaurs. They have been roughly 23 toes lengthy and used 4 paddle-like limbs to swim and flattened skulls with slender conical enamel inside their mouths that have been used to catch fish and squid.

    The nothosaurus vertebra discovered on this research dates again to when current day New Zealand was situated on the southern polar coast of an enormous super-ocean referred to as Panthalassa. When a mass extinction referred to as the Great Dying devastated marine ecosystems about 250 million years in the past, the surviving reptiles discovered alternative in Earth’s oceans. 

    Scientists have discovered proof of this evolutionary benchmark on the Arctic island of Spitsbergen, northwestern North America, and southwestern China. This single nothosaur vertebra fossil within the research is likely one of the newest finds from this time interval and will shed new gentle on the historical past of ancient sea reptiles from the Southern Hemisphere. 

    A brand new have a look at an previous fossil

    The New Zealand nothosaur was initially found throughout a geological survey in 1978, embedded in a boulder in a stream on the foot of Mount Harper on the South Island of New Zealand. The significance of this was not totally acknowledged till a group of paleontologists from Australia, East Timor, Norway, New Zealand, and Sweden collaborated to look at and analyze the vertebra and different fossils. 

    “The nothosaur found in New Zealand is over 40 million years older than the previously oldest known sauropterygian fossils from the Southern Hemisphere,” Benjamin Kear, a research co-author and paleontologist at The Museum of Evolution at Uppsala University in Sweden, stated in an announcement. “We show that these ancient sea reptiles lived in a shallow coastal environment teeming with marine creatures within what was then the southern polar circle.”

    a black vertebra fossil
    Original fossil of the New Zealand nothosaur vertebra. The oldest sea-going reptile from the Southern Hemisphere. Image by Benjamin Kear. CREDIT: Benjamin Kear.

    The oldest recognized nothosaur fossils are roughly 248 million years previous. They have primarily been discovered alongside an ancient northern low-latitude belt that stretched from the distant northeastern to northwestern borders of the Panthalassa super-ocean. 

    Surfing the Panthalassa super-ocean

    Paleontologists are nonetheless debating the origin, distribution, and timing of when nothosaurs reached these distant areas. Some prevailing theories counsel that they both migrated alongside northern polar coastlines, swam via inland seaways, or utilized currents to cross the Panthalassa super-ocean. Now, this new nothosaur fossil is throwing some chilly water on these hypotheses.

    “Using a time-calibrated evolutionary model of sauropterygian global distributions, we show that nothosaurs originated near the equator, then rapidly spread both northwards and southwards at the same time as complex marine ecosystems became re-established after the cataclysmic mass extinction that marked the beginning of the Age of Dinosaurs,” stated Kear.

    [Related: This Jurassic-era ‘sea murderer’ was among the first of its kind.]

    When the Age of the Dinosaurs started, the Earth was going via an excessive interval of world warming. The heat temperatures allowed these marine reptiles to thrive at Earth’s South Pole. Kear and the group imagine that this implies the ancient polar areas have been seemingly the first route for the nothosaurus’ earliest international migration. This is just like the extremely lengthy migrations undertaken by immediately’s whales.

    More research is required to substantiate this and can solely come from digging up extra stays of this ancient real-life sea dragon. 

    “Undoubtedly, there are more fossil remains of long-extinct sea monsters waiting to be discovered in New Zealand and elsewhere in the Southern Hemisphere,” says Kear.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp

    Related Posts

    Science

    Big Tech Signs White House Data Center Pledge With Good Optics and Little Substance

    Science

    Inside the best dark matter detector ever built

    Science

    NASA’s Artemis moon exploration programme is getting a major makeover

    Science

    Scientists crack the case of “screeching” Scotch tape

    Science

    Blue-faced, puffy-lipped monkey scores a rare conservation win

    Science

    Big Tech Says Generative AI Will Save the Planet. It Doesn’t Offer Much Proof

    Science

    The experiments that could finally explain gravity

    Science

    Weird inside-out planet system may have formed one world at a time

    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Follow Us
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    Top Posts
    Crypto

    Make or Break Season? Crypto Analyst Predicts A Fall To $1,200 If Ethereum Stays Beneath This Level

    Like most altcoins, Ethereum (ETH) has seen its value succumb to the detrimental market sentiment…

    AI

    Google DeepMind has launched a watermarking tool for AI-generated images

    In the previous yr, the large recognition of generative AI fashions has additionally introduced with…

    Gadgets

    Life360 ventures into pet tech with the launch of a new GPS tracker

    The household security app Life360 is venturing into pet tech with the launch of its…

    Mobile

    Beats Fit Pro vs Beats Studio Buds Plus: What’s the difference?

    While Beats might be most well-known for its over-the-ear headphones, it’s nonetheless a drive to…

    Technology

    Save up to $100 on retro speakers from Marshall and JBL

    Speakers aren’t simply one thing we hear to. We even have to take a look…

    Our Picks
    Science

    Meet the new king of the ‘living fossils’

    The Future

    Showing iMessage Signed Out Error? Ways to Fix It

    Science

    20% of grocery store milk has traces of bird flu, suggesting wider outbreak

    Categories
    • AI (1,560)
    • Crypto (1,826)
    • Gadgets (1,870)
    • Mobile (1,910)
    • Science (1,939)
    • Technology (1,862)
    • The Future (1,716)
    Most Popular
    AI

    Taking AI to the next level in manufacturing

    AI

    Researchers from Genentech and Stanford University Develop an Iterative Perturb-seq Procedure Leveraging Machine Learning for Efficient Design of Perturbation Experiments

    Mobile

    Samsung confirms Galaxy Z Flip 5, Fold 5 launch details

    Ztoog
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    • Home
    • About Us
    • Contact us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms & Conditions
    © 2026 Ztoog.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.