Violent weather key to isle's dinosaur heritage
It revealed that the island's once-violent weather explains why
thousands of tiny dinosaur teeth and bones lie buried alongside the
huge bones of their gigantic relatives.
The research was carried out by University of Portsmouth
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide Adpalaeontologist Dr Steve Sweetman and Dr Allan Insole, from the University of Bristol.
It is published in the journal Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology.
Dr Sweetman said: "When a fire was rapidly followed by an intense flood, a snapshot of life on the Isle of Wight 130 million years ago was taken and preserved for us to see today, making the Isle of Wight one of the most important dinosaur sites in the world.
"Apart from the sheer diversity of dinosaurs found on the island, we also have the remains of the animals and plants that lived with them.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide Ad"During the Early Cretaceous when dinosaurs roamed, the climate was much warmer than today.
"This was partly to do with the geographical position of the Isle of Wight at the time – the latitude was roughly where Gibraltar is now – but also reflects the extreme greenhouse conditions of that era."
The academics said vegetation became parched during summer months where temperatures rose – increasing the likelihood of lightning strikes causing
fires.
Dr Sweetman said: "Occasionally very heavy rain would follow electrical storms and wild fires, causing flash floods.
Advertisement
Hide AdAdvertisement
Hide Ad"These swept up all loose objects in their path, swallowed complete dinosaur skeletons and eroded floodplain sediment."
The rotting plants in this sediment removed oxygen, providing ideal conditions for the preservation of bones.