Oct 27, 2009, 14:52 GMT
London - British scientists said Tuesday they were excited at the discovery of the fossilised skull of a giant 'sea monster' in a scenic region of south-west Britain known as the Jurassic Coast.
Dorset county council said the fossil comes from a pliosaur, a ferocious predator which lived in the oceans 150 million years ago. The skull, which was discovered by a local collector, measures 2.4 metres in length.
Scientists believe the creature would have been 16 metres in length - one of the largest pliosaurs ever found. It was purchased by Dorset County Council for display at a local museum in Dorchester, south-west Britain.
Pliosaurs were a form of plesiosaur, a group of giant aquatic reptiles which lived in the seas at around the same time dinosaurs roamed the Earth, scientists explained.
They had short necks and huge, crocodilian-like heads that contained immensely powerful jaws and a set of huge, razor-sharp teeth.
They used four paddle-like limbs to propel their bulky bodies through the water, and would have preyed on dolphin-like ichthyosaurs and even other plesiosaurs.
'These creatures were monsters, said David Martill, a palaeontologist from the University of Portsmouth.
'They had massive big muscles on their necks, and you would have imagined that they would bite into the animal and get a good grip, and then with these massive neck muscles they probably would have thrashed the animals around and torn chunks off. It would have been a bit of a blood bath.'
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