Monograph on Rhomaleosaurus thorntoni

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Reconstruction of the skeleton of Rhomaleosaurus thorntoni from Smith & Benson (2014).

Many readers will be familiar with the giant plesiosaur on display in the marine reptiles gallery of the Natural History Museum, London. This is a cast of the 7 metre long holotype of Rhomaleosaurus cramptoni, the original of which is housed in the National Museum of Ireland (Natural History) and formed the…

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Why did elasmosaurids have such a long neck?

It was once common knowledge that elasmosaurid plesiosaurs were bendy-necked beasts that swanned about near the surface, striking snake-like at slippery prey. It is now common knowledge that their necks were relatively rigid rod-like structures, the function of which remains something of a mystery. The truth, with regard to flexibility at least,…

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The Smallest Plesiosaur

Some museum collections contain a few scraps of plesiosaur materal. Others have large quantities. Whatever the size of the collection, there are almost always odd specimens which are interesting in one way or another and usually encountered whilst engaged in some completely different project. We may make a mental note to come…

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Label found in the Oxford University Museum of Natural History

The following label was found by Richard Forrest "in the collections of the Oxford University Museum of Natural History with J.28587, the holotype of Plesiosaurus macromus (Owen 1840)" He added the annotated image to the front page of his 'The Plesiosaur Site' around May 2014. I'm reposting it here under Richard's name…

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Book review: Sticks ‘N’ Stones ‘N’ Dinosaur Bones

"I'll tell you a story -- and some of it's true -- that explores and explains what the Bone-Hunters do." You're probably already familiar with the Bone Wars, or the Great Dinosaur Rush, but you won't have seen this real-life rivalry between two prolific 19th century palaeontologists portrayed quite like this before.…

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Book review: Plesiosaur Peril by Daniel Loxton

In Plesiosaur Peril, author Daniel Loxton plunges us into the Jurassic ocean, to recount a day in the life of a baby Cryptoclidus. The book is the third in Loxton's 'Tales of Prehistoric Life' series, which includes the stories Ankylosaur Attack and Pterosaur Troubles. In this short children's story we follow a juvenile Cryptoclidus…

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A new domain for The Marine Reptiles Forum

The marine reptiles forum, which was unfortunately hacked last year (2013) and has been offline for several months since, is now back up and running. Richard Forrest was able to salvage all the old posts and user information, and has restored the forum at a dedicated new domain: marinereptiles.org. The forum is…

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The Plesiosaur Directory wins the 2013 Golden Trilobite Award

The Golden Trilobite is awarded annually by the Palaeontological Association to "high quality amateur and institutional websites that promote the charitable aims of the Association". I've no idea who nominated my website this year, but my thanks go to whoever raised it to the attention of the the PalAss Council, because it…

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The Science of the Weymouth Bay Pliosaur

The announcement of the discovery of this spectacular specimen created a media frenzy in October of 2009 and was followed by another significant media event when the prepared skull was put on display and formally unveiled by Sir David Attenborough in June 2011. In many ways, this is when the hard work…

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Pliosaurus kevani – the Weymouth Bay Pliosaur

I've been rather quiet again recently, however, as coauthor of an article just published in PLOS ONE, I've good reason to come out of my shell today. The new paper describes and names the Weymouth Bay Pliosaur, a spectacular almost complete skull over 2m long. As discussed in the open access paper…

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A new Lyme Regis pliosaur

Earlier this month I co-authored a poster at SVP 2012 describing a new pliosaur from the Sinemurian of Lyme Regis (Smith and Araújo 2012). I was unable to attend the conference in person so my collaborator and friend Ricardo Araujo was on hand to present our preliminary findings. Ricardo Araújo stands proudly next…

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New plesiosaurs, lots of new plesiosaurs!

There was a time when I'd leap into tippy-tappy action at the first sniff of a newly named plesiosaur. Unfortunately, I haven't been keeping Plesiosaur Bites up to date and a few new taxa have passed me by. Of course, when I say "a few", what I really mean is we are…

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The ‘Honington plesiosaur’ goes on show at Warwickshire Museum

Most museum collections contain hidden treasures, but the Honington plesiosaur in the Warwickshire Museum is one treasure, I'm pleased to say, that is no longer hidden. I first came across the Honington plesiosaur while working in the geological collection  of the Warwickshire Museum under the supervision of Jon Radley, the curator of…

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The Planet Dinosaur plesiosaurs (part 2)

So, time for more Planet Dinosaur plesiosaurs... In part 1 of we familiarised ourselves with the taxonomy and appearance of the plesiosaurian stars of the fourth episode of the BBC's Planet Dinosaur, 'Fight for Life'. Now we're all set up to pick apart, with ruthless abandon, the animators' painstaking efforts to bring…

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The Planet Dinosaur plesiosaurs (part 1)

Astute viewers of BBC's plesiosaur-fest on Planet Dinosaur this week may have spotted my name dash across the screen at the end credits. 'Fight for Life', the fourth in the series, was the first episode, and so far as I'm aware only episode, to plunge us into the Mesozoic oceans and introduce…

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