Invited talk Minerva Lecture Series, University of Bath

Abstract

Ichthyosaurs have had a long history in the two centuries after being discovered by Mary Anning and recognised as a new, extinct kind of animal. These fish-shaped marine reptiles existed for 160 million years as some of the most diverse and numerous large animals in the Mesozoic oceans. Despite this, there have been large gaps in the study of ichthyosaurs and in our knowledge of ichthyosaur evolution: where did ichthyosaurs originate? how did they become so diverse? what caused their decline and extinction? New interest has begun to fill these gaps, but only with modern analytical techniques that incorporate morphology, ecology, function, and evolutionary trees are we starting to get much a fuller understanding of the hows and whys of ichthyosaur evolution. Here I will go through this recent shift in our knowledge, how these new techniques are being applied, and where future work could bring new insights to ichthyosaur evolution.

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