Remarkable fossil of 180-million-year-old 'sea monster' preserved its Jurassic-era blubber and skin

Remarkable fossil of 180-million-year-old ‘sea monster’ preserved its Jurassic-era blubber and skin originally appeared on abcnews.go.com

Scientists have identified an extraordinary specimen of fossilized blubber from a ‘fish-lizard’ that lived 180 million years ago, according to a new report in the journal Nature.

The blubber, a layer of fat beneath the skin of modern marine mammals that helps them preserve heat, indicates that the ancient ‘sea monster’ was warm-blooded, an unusual quality in a reptile, according to the report’s authors.

The Jurassic-era sea creature, called an ichthyosaur, appears to have shared qualities of both a mammal and a reptile, according to Johan Lindgren, a senior lecturer at Lund University in Sweden.

“They looked kind of similar to dolphins, but the tail fin, it was vertical rather than horizontal,” Lindgren told ABC News. “They were reptiles,” he said, while “dolphins, they are mammals like you and me. But ichthyosaurs, they were reptiles.”

(MORE: Whale songs in the ocean around Antarctica have transformed; climate change could be why)

PHOTO: Comparison between artificially matured modern porpoise integument and fossil ichthyosaur blubber. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University )

PHOTO: Comparison between artificially matured modern porpoise integument and fossil ichthyosaur blubber. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University )

PHOTO: Comparison between artificially matured modern porpoise integument and fossil ichthyosaur blubber. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University )

Ichthyosaurs didn’t just look like dolphins, Lindgren explained.

“In most aspects, I would say that they were living like dolphins,” he said. “They were really dark … almost blackish.”

“I would imagine kind of dorsal skin, and some forms were deep divers that could venture down to perhaps several hundred meters and then go up again.” Several hundred meters is more than 1000 feet.

Lindgren said that to date, researchers have not be able to identified its exact age or gender.

(MORE: Northern elephant seals have a more diverse language now that their populations are thriving)

PHOTO: An 180-million-year-old ichthyosaur (literally ‘fish-lizard’) fossil has been discovered. Photographic (top) and diagrammatic (bottom) representation of the 85-cm-long fossil. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University )

PHOTO: An 180-million-year-old ichthyosaur (literally ‘fish-lizard’) fossil has been discovered. Photographic (top) and diagrammatic (bottom) representation of the 85-cm-long fossil. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University )

PHOTO: An 180-million-year-old ichthyosaur (literally ‘fish-lizard’) fossil has been discovered. Photographic (top) and diagrammatic (bottom) representation of the 85-cm-long fossil. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University )

Lindgren said researchers found pigment cells concentrated on the dorsal side of the creature’s body.

“So this animal was originally countershaded, meaning that it had a dark upper surface and the light belly.”

Such natural ‘camouflage’ is common to modern animal groups, both terrestrial and marine life.

“It’s a form of camouflage that you use when you need to hide in plain sight,” Lindgren said.

(MORE: Siberian Unicorn may have walked the earth alongside humans: Study)

PHOTO: One hundred and eighty-million-year-old pigment cells. To the left, light micrograph of the branched melanophores. In the center an X-ray of a melanophore. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University )

PHOTO: One hundred and eighty-million-year-old pigment cells. To the left, light micrograph of the branched melanophores. In the center an X-ray of a melanophore. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University )

PHOTO: One hundred and eighty-million-year-old pigment cells. To the left, light micrograph of the branched melanophores. In the center an X-ray of a melanophore. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University )

Sea minerals appear to have helped preserve and fossilize the creature’s blubber.

“If you remove the minerals the original soft tissues are still there,” Lindgren said. “They were exceedingly rapidly-entombed in the minerals, so that must’ve happened, you know, during the decay of the animal. They were entombed in calcium phosphate and that entombment apparently preserved the tissues.”

(MORE: The reason humans hate wasps and love bees: Study)

The fossil dates back to the Jurassic era, said another co-author Mary Schweitzer, professor of biological sciences at North Carolina State University.

PHOTO: Fossilized skin forming the trailing edge of the right pelvic fin. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University)

PHOTO: Fossilized skin forming the trailing edge of the right pelvic fin. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University)

PHOTO: Fossilized skin forming the trailing edge of the right pelvic fin. (Johan Lindgren/Lund University)

Schweitzer said studying this fossil could help explain ‘biological diversity’ and ‘what makes animal thrive.’

“We cannot possibly predict the future of our planet without understanding the past,” Schweitzer said. “That is where all the data lie.”

“Understanding how animals functioned in their past environments sheds light on how they might adapt to our own changing planet.”