New reptile species found in fossil at Pant-y-ffynnon Quarry

University of Bristol Fossil fragmentsUniversity of Bristol
Tiny details: The backbone curves round from top right to bottom left with other bones at the centre and magnified here, shown next to a 1cm scale bar

Fossil fragments left in a museum storeroom for decades have been identified as a new reptile species that was roaming about 200 million years ago.

Tiny armour plates, vertebrae and ribs were revealed inside a small rock put into a CT scanner to view it in 3D.

Experts believe the plates "put it on the crocodile side of the evolutionary tree" from the Late Triassic period.

It was found at a quarry in the Vale of Glamorgan in the 1950s.

It has been named Aenigmaspina pantyffynnonensis which refers, in part, to where it was found at Pant-y-ffynnon Quarry, which has been the site of other finds.

Erin Patrick, a student at University of Bristol, found it in a storeroom of the Natural History Museum in London and decided to look closer.

No skull was among the bones, some of which measure millimetres in length.

But there were enough fragments to allow her and other experts to describe it as a new species, with the findings published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

University of Bristol 3D reconstruction of the fossil fragmentsUniversity of Bristol
3D reconstruction of the fossil fragments

Ms Patrick said: "During the Triassic, there was a flurry of different reptile groups emerging related to modern crocodiles, but most of these were pretty huge and had special features not present in Aenigmaspina."

The specimen was found in two blocks of rock that fit together to form a lump the size of a child's hand.

On the surface were small bones, but the other "treasures" found by the CT scanner were vertebrae, ribs, a scapula, and tiny armour plates from its back.

Prof Mike Benton, from the university's School of Earth Sciences, said the new discovery appeared to be a "relative of another little armoured beast" called Erpetosuchus, known from the Late Triassic of north-east Scotland and the eastern United States.

The findings also revealed the creature was living on a small limestone island, part of a sub-tropical archipelago, according to his colleague, Dr David Whiteside.

C909328 | RCAHMW Aerial view of Pant-y-ffynnon QuarryC909328 | RCAHMW
The quarry has been site of other fossil finds over the years