Emily and family

See a rare Iguanodon skull fossil at Dinosaur Isle

Isle of Wight council share this latest news. Ed


The remains of a rare Iguanodon skull fossil found on the Isle of Wight are to go on display at Dinosaur Isle, Sandown.

The fossil was found by Emily Tabassi-Gill and her family, from East Sussex, on a fossil walk led by Dinosaur Isle staff in February. The find, a left pre-maxilla, is the front of the horse-like skull of the plant eating dinosaur Iguanodon. Skulls of dinosaurs are incredibly rare as they are fragile and less likely to become fossils than bones such as the vertebrae (back bones) and limbs.

Dinosaur Isle Community Learning Assistant Alex Peaker said:

“We are really grateful to Emily for her donation. Her generosity and that of so many other people is what helps us maintain a fantastic display and helps our understanding of the past progress. Because of this generosity we can make sure the museum is stacked full of real fossils. Emily’s discovery is now on display so coming to the museum is a fantastic opportunity to see and find out more about it.”

Bone after excavation

Emily wasted no time in donating her find to Dinosaur Isle and said:

“It was so exciting to have discovered the fossil. We were on a fantastic fossil walk with Alex who was identifying everybody’s finds. I was excited to have spotted something and it was fascinating to watch Alex and his colleagues dig the whole fossil out of the clay.

“When Alex explained that it could be something unusual my family and I decided to donate it to the museum. I feel it is important that experts like Alex can use the fossil in their research and that it is kept safely by the museum for the future. We are delighted that ‘our fossil’ will be on display at the Dinosaur Isle Museum and we will definitely be back to see it!”

Executive member for public transport, tourism, recreation and heritage, Councillor Shirley Smart said:

“What a fabulous find for Emily to make on her fossil walk with Dinosaur Isle Museum staff. The walks are a very popular part of the services offered by the museum and are available to tourists and residents alike.

“Dinosaur Isle is a much loved venue on the Island and has great support from the local community and the Friends of Dinosaur Isle, as well as welcoming visitors from around the world. I would recommend the popular fossil walks on offer as anyone could make a spectacular find. I’m sure this find made it a holiday to remember for Emily and her family.”

What is most unusual about the fossil is that the remains come from layers which rarely preserve dinosaur bones. Dinosaur remains are common in the Wessex Formation; the mostly purple to red clays that can be found on the south-west coast of the Island. The new finds come from the younger Vectis Formation; the blue grey clays and sandstones found at Compton, Shepherd’s Chine and Yaverland.

The Vectis Formation formed in a lagoon which would have been relatively inhospitable to dinosaurs. The new find is a first of its kind in the collections of Dinosaur Isle, with no dinosaurs having been found in the Cowleaze Chine Member (a specific part of the Vectis Formation) in the collections of Dinosaur Isle, the British Geological Survey, or the Natural History Museum, London.

Bone as found

Dinosaur Isle runs fossil walks throughout the year giving the opportunity to make amazing finds. More information on the walks can be found on their website www.dinosaurisle.com, with further story on this new find on the facebook page www.facebook.com/dinosaurisle.

Image: © Isle of Wight Council

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susan pamela mawhood
26, June 2014 8:23 pm

Thank you so much Seb,I love living on our beautiful island and your vidio confirms its stunning beauty

John Nash
26, June 2014 8:25 pm

A good proportion of the lovely views in this video will be wrecked if the Navitus Bay proposal is given consent. Of more than two thousand eight hundred “representions” made to the Planning Inspectorate, who will be examining the scheme, only about 6 are from Island residents. The rest are from Dorset residents. Why the disparity? Are Islanders simply Holier than Thou, gullible, apathetic, or just plain… Read more »

yjciow
27, June 2014 2:21 pm

@John Nash. Your comment is totally 100% accurate (naive, gullible and apathetic) ((I’m allowed to say that as I am an islander and have first hand experience of all three!)). The Isle of Wight will be wrecked by Navitus Bay – so many people In the West Wight do not realise that they will have their peace shattered. Bournemouth Council have been very active against this proposal… Read more »

bigEars
27, June 2014 6:17 pm

You have to wonder why anybody would seriously consider putting up a silly alternative energy wind farm when we can get all the energy we need by fracking the hell out of the Island instead. Better still, we could cover the Island in solar cells. Or how about a nice nuclear power station? Or a tidal wave barrier (obviously as long as it doesn’t effect the local… Read more »

Caconym
28, June 2014 11:19 am

When a wind farm story appears on the IWCP website, the comments soon fill with anti wind power comments, the authors of which reply in the most obnoxious and objectionable ways should anyone dare to suggest that they don’t really mind wind turbines (not even “support”, merely not object). It is gratifying to see the down-votes awarded to John Nash who, like those on the IWCP, resorts… Read more »

John Nash
Reply to  Caconym
28, June 2014 4:46 pm

My “just plain stupid” remark was, to be sure,ill-tempered and unkind, and was prompted by my sheer disbelief at the lack of submissions (both for and against Navitus Bay) to the Planning Inspectorate. I will not retract my other remarks because they can be shown to be true. And I would add “naive” and ill-informed” to that list. It is no good trumpeting how beautiful the Island… Read more »

kevin1746
Reply to  John Nash
28, June 2014 5:07 pm

Your essentials are not the same as others essentials…I like my lights to go on when I throw the switch and I would like to be responsible for the power that I use, not siphon it off from someone else. I completely support wind farms, Navitus Bay, Tidal and wave generators, thermal and geo thermal and even Nucleur. We have to have alternatives now and no matter… Read more »

Cynic
Reply to  kevin1746
29, June 2014 11:51 am

…. and fracking as well Kevin?

Steve Goodman
Reply to  John Nash
29, June 2014 11:02 am

JN – Where were you & your friends during the decade of decay at Frank James? Could you even have been around when the E.Cowes Castle home of the real John Nash was neglected & demolished? Do you litter pick, or beach clean? Do you clear Himalayan balsam & other invaders? Do you cut back growth spreading on to our foot & cycle paths? Do you plant… Read more »

John Nash
Reply to  Steve Goodman
29, June 2014 1:22 pm

As far as I know I am real. I do not hide behind a pseudonym. Some of my “environmental” credentials are as follows: 1. I have never owned or driven a car or any other motorised vehicle. 2. Since a very young age I have detested rampant consumerism. I regard this as a perversion of the human spirit. 3. I have only ever flown on a long… Read more »

Steve Goodman
Reply to  John Nash
30, June 2014 11:21 am

John; looking at what you wrote, we have a lot in common, & I’m sorry that we are currently unable to agree on the need to allow temporary or permanent wind turbines in places we value. I am also sorry that the wording I used didn’t allow for the possibility that you hadn’t used as a pseudonym the name of the famous former island resident. Coincidentally, I… Read more »

Caconym
Reply to  John Nash
29, June 2014 12:00 pm

You think the best way to convince the undecided and ambivalent over to your point of view is to hurl insults at them?

Generally the opposite is true. Tell someone who is sitting on the fence that they are “stupid” and “naive” because they don’t believe as you do and they will almost always come out in complete opposition to you.

Tanja Rebel
29, June 2014 11:34 am

I think we can all agree that energy conservation needs to be the Island’s top priority. In conjunction with that we need good renewable energy sources and I think that the Isle of Wight is ideally placed for solar and tidal energy schemes. With regards to off-shore wind, if this is put in a responsible position then it can contribute too. The currently proposed position is too… Read more »

Tanja Rebel
30, June 2014 6:41 pm

The wind farm will be far less of a threat to our Coastal Heritage if it is put further out to sea. The Developers had that option, but chose the spot nearest to the coast. This is understandable from a cost-perspective, but – as stated – we need to balance our insatiable thirst for ever more energy against the (timeless) value of our Heritage. If we put… Read more »

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