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Remains of Bus-Sized Reptile Found

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Oct. 5, 2006 — Remains of an enormous Jurassic Period marine reptile, nicknamed "The Monster," were found 800 miles from the North Pole, along with a treasure trove of other unusual dinosaur-era fossils, according to the University of Oslo Natural History Museum.

With a skeleton length of 33 feet or more, the monster reptile is one of the largest pliosaurs ever discovered. Pliosaurs were marine giants that had short necks, massive heads and numerous banana-sized teeth.

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Jørn H. Hurum, assistant professor of vertebrate paleontology at the University of Oslo, Norway, and his colleagues found all of the remains at the arctic archipelago of Svalbard, which appears to have been teeming with life 150 million years ago. The scientists announced their finding as a preliminary report and plan to continue excavation and preparation before publishing on the discovery.

In just two weeks, the researchers found evidence for 27 marine reptiles, and they suspect there’s more where those came from.

The fossil for the huge pliosaur was found poking out of a steep hillside.

"We have at least a vertebrate column of over 19 feet, a flipper and the skull," Hurum told Discovery News. "The rest is still inside the mountain. The animal was the top predator of its time and it had everybody on the menu."

Each of the specimen’s vertebra alone was as large as a dinner plate.

The fossil finds also included short-necked plesiosaurs and long-necked ones that possessed a tiny head at the end of what the researchers said was "a ridiculously long neck."

Additionally, the remains for six ichthyosaurs were uncovered. Ichthyosaurs resembled modern dolphins, except they had bugged-out eyes and teeth that looked like two sets of saws that could come slicing down on prey.

Ichthyosaurs possessed two sets of powerful flippers and had an upright tail fin that could propel them through the water.

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Pictures: DCI | Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, Norway | Natural History Museum, University of Oslo, Norway |
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