Sea Monster discovered in Dorset Cliff

Sea Monster discovered in Dorset Cliff

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Discussion

Acorn1

Original Poster:

650 posts

20 months

Sunday 10th December 2023
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Eric Mc

122,033 posts

265 months

Sunday 10th December 2023
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It might all be there as well. I think this might turn out to be the largest fossil ever found in Britain.

Pilotguy

433 posts

259 months

Sunday 10th December 2023
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Amazing find, that’s worth a visit next year.

mikebradford

2,520 posts

145 months

Sunday 10th December 2023
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That's amazing, let's hope the rest of the skeleton is in the cliff and can be recovered.

Milkyway

9,440 posts

53 months

Sunday 10th December 2023
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mikebradford said:
That's amazing, let's hope the rest of the skeleton is in the cliff and can be recovered.
It could go a long way... in either direction.
( Might even find some more fossils in the process)

Simpo Two

85,450 posts

265 months

Sunday 10th December 2023
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The piece David Attenborough is looking at doesn't look anything like the fossil in the top photo.

otherman

2,191 posts

165 months

Sunday 10th December 2023
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Simpo Two said:
The piece David Attenborough is looking at doesn't look anything like the fossil in the top photo.
That's just the snout before they got the rest of the head out.

Beati Dogu

8,894 posts

139 months

Sunday 10th December 2023
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It’s called the Jurassic Coast for a reason.

The recent rough weather probably exposed the rock it was in

hidetheelephants

24,386 posts

193 months

Sunday 10th December 2023
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At least the rock being soft ste should in theory enable its prompt removal.

Simpo Two

85,450 posts

265 months

Monday 11th December 2023
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otherman said:
Simpo Two said:
The piece David Attenborough is looking at doesn't look anything like the fossil in the top photo.
That's just the snout before they got the rest of the head out.
It looks bigger... in the top photo the snout section is about the size of a man's head; in the lower photo it's bigger.


Edited by Simpo Two on Monday 11th December 21:00

DKL

4,492 posts

222 months

Wednesday 27th December 2023
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The piece they found on the beach was about the size of a football. They could see where it had come from in the cliff. Said cliffs have the consistency of blancmange.
It always makes me laugh, Steve Etches (of the Etches Collection where this monster will be displayed- a great day out by the way) has a video of him cutting chunks of rock out with an angle grinder when he finds something yet in the middle of the country you get news stories pointing out you can't take stones from the beach!
I do wonder if they will look for the rest of the pliosaur as he seems pretty certain it's in there. Getting it out could be fun.


Edited by DKL on Thursday 4th January 11:04

RosscoPCole

3,318 posts

174 months

Tuesday 2nd January
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After seeing the programme last night my son asked if we could see the Pliosaur, so we popped to Kimmeridge.

The Etches Collection is fantastic. Hadn't been for a few years and I'd forgotten how easy to understand the exhibits due to the brilliant way they are presented.

Fast and Spurious

1,323 posts

88 months

Tuesday 2nd January
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Amazing programme, hope they get the rest out... 10 metres? 11? 12?????

Beati Dogu

8,894 posts

139 months

Wednesday 3rd January
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A bit further to the west at Budleigh Salterton you can clearly see fossilised tree roots in the cliff face. These red sandstone cliffs are actually from the Triassic period around 230 million years ago. The area was part of Pangea at the time and was located near the equator. Part of an ancient desert whose iron rich sand gives much of Devon’s soil its red colour.


Eric Mc

122,033 posts

265 months

Thursday 4th January
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I love that coast. I keep expecting to see a Trodon walking along the sea wall smile



Trodon is a very early dinosaur and it is amazing to think that it, or animals similar to it, walked around the area that is now Budleigh Salterton 230 million years ago.

Of course, back then Devon was much closer to the equator compared to its current location. I expect that the landscape back then looked a bit like the Gobi Desert does today.

Simpo Two

85,450 posts

265 months

Thursday 4th January
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Eric Mc said:
Trodon is a very early dinosaur and it is amazing to think that it, or animals similar to it, walked around the area that is now Budleigh Salterton 230 million years ago.
I guessed it was a late dinosaur judging by the feathers (ie on the way to birds) so I looked it up: Wiki has it as Late Cretaceous, 77M years ago.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Troodon

Eric Mc

122,033 posts

265 months

Thursday 4th January
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Must have got mixed up with some other dino.

The first dinosaurs appeared during the Triassic so there might well have been some floating around Devon - probably buying ice cream and fish n' chips.

Beati Dogu

8,894 posts

139 months

Thursday 4th January
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More likely swooping in and stealing them from tourist cavemen, like their modern descendants. .

Simpo Two

85,450 posts

265 months

Thursday 4th January
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I'm going to cut a square inch out of Eric's anorak to hang on the wall as a trophy hehe

Eric Mc

122,033 posts

265 months

Saturday 6th January
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I got rid of my anorak in 1979. It's already fossilised.