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Placodont

Senckenberg Nature Museum Frankfurt

Senckenberg Nature Museum Frankfurt
Frankfurt am Main, Germany

The skeleton of the plate-toothed Placodus gigas represents the only skeleton of this marine reptile anywhere in the world. Its torso was reinforced by closely arranged ribs and gastralia (“ventral ribs”) as well as a series of round ossifications of the skin above the vertebral processes. Therefore, these marine predators could only use their legs for propulsion. In 1915, a fossil collector found skeletal remnants in a quarry near Heidelberg inside already broken-up gravel stones. All of the pieces that could be located were put together, and over a period of several years, the skeletal remains were painstakingly extracted from the hard rock and assembled into an entire skeleton.

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  • Title: Placodont
  • Location: Steinsfurt near Heidelberg, Baden-Württemberg, Germany
  • Type: original
  • Rights: Sven Tränkner Senckenberg Gesellschaft für Naturforschung
  • size: 1,5 m
  • scientific name: Placodus gigas
  • geological Age: Triassic
  • age: 235 mil. years
Senckenberg Nature Museum Frankfurt

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