Rare, exceptionally-preserved fossil reveals lifestyle of ancient armour-plated reptile

Complete fossil of Eusaurosphargis dalsassoi, found in the mountains of Grisons, Switzerland, reveals a 241-million-year-old creature’s unexpected form for the first time.

Palaeontologists at University of Zurich and Oxford University Museum of Natural History pieced together evidence to suggest the reptile lived on land, contrary to previous understanding

Fossil of Eusaurosphargid dalsassoi

(c) Dr Torsten Scheyer; Palaeontological Institute and Museum, University of Zurich, Switzerland

An exceptionally-preserved fossil from the Alps in eastern Switzerland has revealed the best look so far at an armoured reptile from the Middle Triassic. Named Eusaurosphargis dalsassoi, the fossil is extremely rare in that it contains the animal’s complete skeleton, giving an Anglo-Swiss research team a very clear idea of its detailed anatomy and probable lifestyle for the first time, according to a paper published in Scientific Reports today.

At just 20 cm long, the specimen represents the remains of a juvenile. Yet large portions of its body were covered in armour plates, with a distinctively spiky row around each flank, protecting the animal from predators. Today’s girdled lizards, found in Africa, have independently evolved a very similar appearance even though they are not closely related to Eusaurosphargis.

The new fossil, found in the Prosanto Formation at Ducanfurgga, south of Davos in Switzerland, is not the first material of Eusaurosphargis to be discovered. The species was originally described in 2003 based on a partially complete and totally disarticulated specimen from Italy. This was found alongside fossils of fish and marine reptiles, leading scientists to believe that Eusaurosphargis was an aquatic animal.

However, the detail preserved in the new specimen shows a skeleton without a streamlined body outline and no modification of the arms, legs or tail for swimming. This suggests that the reptile was in fact most probably adapted to live, at least mostly, on land, even though all of its closest evolutionary relatives lived in the water.

“Until this new discovery we thought that Eusaurophargis was aquatic, so we were astonished to discover that the skeleton actually shows adaptations to life on the land,” says Dr James Neenan, research fellow at Oxford University Museum of Natural History and co-author of the new paper about Eusaurosphargis dalsassoi. “We think this particular animal must have washed into the sea from somewhere like a beach, where it sank to the sea floor, was buried and finally fossilised.”

The findings from the research team can be found in Scientific Reports' 2017 publication ‘A new, exceptionally preserved juvenile specimen of Eusaurosphargis dalsassoi (Diapsida) and implications for Mesozoic marine diapsid phylogeny’ 

 

For more information contact Dr James Neenan, Research Fellow, Oxford University Museum of Natural History: james.neenan@oum.ox.ac.uk | 01865 272995