Jurassic sea monster discovered at Whittlesey’s Must Farm quarry goes on display

A Jurassic sea monster discovered at the Must Farm quarry in Whittlesey has gone on display to the public.
Eve the dinosaur on displayEve the dinosaur on display
Eve the dinosaur on display

The rare, 165 million-year-old plesiosaur skeleton has been unveiled after it was discovered at the Forterra quarry and donated to Oxford University Museum of Natural History by the company.

The 5.5-metre long-necked marine reptile nicknamed Eve was found by a group of palaeontologists from the Oxford Clay Working Group in November 2014. The fossil is now being on display at the first time, alongside a second, short-necked plesiosaur at an exhibition called Out Of The Deep.

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The discovery was made not far from where two Bronze Age Roundhouses dating back to around 1290 BC were discovered at the quarry off Funthams Lane.

A £1.1 million project has been funded by government heritage agency Historic England and Forterra to excavate the site.

Visitors to the Oxford University Museum of Natural History will see the remarkably complete skeletons of the sea creatures, which became extinct around 66 million years ago, and be able to interact with digital animations, physical models and touchable elements at the exhibit, which is the largest new permanent display to be added to the museum in decades.

Brian Chapman, Forterra’s head of land and mineral resources, said: “We are thrilled that such a rare and important prehistoric specimen was unearthed at our Must Farm quarry, and we were happy to be able to donate it to the museum where it has been studied by leading palaeontologists and is now on display for everyone to see.”

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The larger specimen was first spotted by Oxford Clay Working Group member Carl Harrington, who noticed a tiny fragment of bone sticking out of the clay while visiting the quarry. Over the course of four days, Carl and his team dug up more than 600 pieces of fossilised bone. They then spent over 400 hours cleaning and repairing the specimen.

Carl said: “I’d never seen so much bone in one spot in a quarry. As I was digging amongst the wet clay, the snout of a plesiosaur started to appear in front of me. It was one of those absolute ‘wow’ moments – I was the first human to come face to face with this reptile.”

The new specimen, called Muraenosaurus Durobrivensis, had a 2.5 metre-long neck, a barrel-shaped body, four flippers and a short tail. The other, short necked plesiosaur, known as a pliosaur, was discovered by a museum curator in the 1990s in Yarnton, Oxfordshire.

On display together for the first time, the two specimens highlight the UK’s exceptional fossil heritage and provide a glimpse of some of the life which inhabited the marine environment of the Jurassic period.

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Visitors to the museum will learn how the fossils were discovered and collected, how palaeontologists investigate specimens using cutting edge technologies and discover how scientists piece together evidence to understand the evolution of life on Earth.

“These fossils help us build up a picture of life in the Jurassic seas, and the videos in the new display will show visitors the real work of palaeontology in action,” said Dr Hilary Ketchum, collections manager at the museum.

“We are very grateful to Forterra for their donation, and of course to the Oxford Clay Working Group who dedicated a great deal of time, energy and passion to the discovery and excavation of this fantastic fossil.”

The project has been supported by grants from the DCMS/Wolfson Museums and Galleries Improvement Fund, and WREN’s FCC Community Action Fund.

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