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13 metre-long sea beast skeleton expel commissioned during UBC

  • September 20, 2018
  • Technology

The elasmosaurus isn’t technically a dinosaur, though it positively looks close.

A expel skeleton of a ancient sea invertebrate has been commissioned during a University of British Columbia, with 13 metres of brownish-red bone dangling opposite a atrium of a Pacific Museum of a Earth.

Nine of those 13 metres are in a creature’s neck.

The elasmosaurus skeleton was commissioned in a potion atrium of UBC’s Earth Sciences Building over a weekend. (UBC)

Scientists contend a elasmosaurus — that lived alongside a dinosaurs 80 million years ago — expected wouldn’t have been means to lift a possess conduct above a H2O since of a perfect weight of a neck.

The reptiles likely lived in a continental sea that lonesome North America during a late Cretaceous period.

The initial elasmosaurus specimen found west of a Rockies was nearby Courtenay, B.C., in 1988.

The reptile’s neck was so prolonged it was expected incompetent to lift a conduct above water, scientists say. (UBC)

Only one confirmed, finish skeleton has ever been unearthed. The expel on display at UBC is modelled after a skeleton found in Kansas.

The university is already home to a lambeosaurus skeleton and a largest blue whale skeleton in Canada.

The blue whale cleared ashore and was buried in P.E.I. in 1987. It was exhumed and shipped to Vancouver in 2010.

Read some-more from CBC British Columbia

Article source: https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/british-columbia/long-necked-marine-reptile-skeleton-displayed-at-ubc-1.4831493?cmp=rss

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