Marine reptile skeleton dating back to age of dinosaurs discovered in southern Manitoba - Action News
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Manitoba

Marine reptile skeleton dating back to age of dinosaurs discovered in southern Manitoba

Researchers in southern Manitoba have made a rare discovery of a fossilized skeleton belonging to a roughly 83-million-year-old mosasaur, a type of marine reptile.

75% of 83-million-year-old mosasaur skeleton uncovered, Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre says

Three people sit on the ground under a tent and use tools to extract fossils.
Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre workers have been using hand tools for several days to expose more of the mosasaur skeleton near Miami, Man. (Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre/Facebook)

Researchers in southern Manitoba have made the rare discovery of what may be a complete fossilized skeleton belonging to a roughly 83-million-year-old marine reptile.

Excavations are still ongoing, but scientists have uncovered roughly 75 per cent of a mosasaur skeleton near the small community of Miami, Man., about 110 kilometres southwest of Winnipeg.

Finding such an intact skeleton israre, according to Adolfo Cuetara, the executive director of the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in Morden, about 20 kilometres southeast of Miami.

"Normally you're only finding isolated bones, but this time itlooks like we have a whole skeleton," he said in an interview with Radio-Canada on Monday.

Inearly July, a technician with the centre found a small bone while digging with a tractor on a plot of land that used to be a bentonite mine, and which the Mordenorganization purchased in 2004.

Finding small bones isn't unusual,Cuetara said, but using hand tools, that technician soon realized that the bone was not an isolated discovery.

Over the next several days, the team found 15 vertebrae, all from the same marine reptile, Cuetara said.

A group of people kneel on the ground and use tools to expose fossils in the ground.
A group of people use hand tools to excavate a mosasaur skeleton found near Miami, Man., last month. (Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre/Facebook)

Mosasaurs lived during theLate Cretaceous(100 million to 66 million years ago), a period at which Manitoba was underwater.

Rare conditions have to be metfor entire skeletons to be fossilized, Cuetarasaid.

The body needs to be buried quickly in sediment to avoid contact with oxygen and bacteria, which break down the bones over time.

"Normally when animals die, the flesh is decomposed and the bones are moved by predators or scavengers or even currents, so that's why most of the times we are finding just isolated pieces," Cuetara said.

Staff from the Morden fossil centre believe this mosasaur, which is between six and seven metres long,is smaller than other mosasaurs found in Manitoba. The biggestis the mosasaur at the Morden centre nicknamed "Bruce," which measures13 metres.

The reptiles grew upto 16 metres long.

A skeleton of a prehistoric reptile is seen in a museum.
'Bruce' is the largest mosasaur ever discovered in Manitoba, measuring 13 metres long. The fossil is now at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in Morden. (John Woods/The Canadian Press)

Once the entire skeleton is exposed, staff will take samples of the surrounding terrain and bring everything back to the lab.

When that process is complete, a paleontologist will study each bone, measure them and compare them to other species to identify the exact species.

"It's a process that takes normally years to do if you want to do it properly," Cuetara said.

With files from Esther Morand