Jump directly to the content
BONE TO PICK

World’s oldest lizard fossil stuns scientists after being unearthed in BRISTOL with remarkable detail still intact

The tiny skeleton has been the source of much debate

AN ANCIENT lizard dating back 205million years has been confirmed to be the "world's oldest" in a fresh study.

The fossilised reptile, which was unearthed in a quarry near Bristol, UK, has been preserved in remarkable detail.

Named Cryptovaranoides microlanius, the lizard dates back to a time when reptiles dominated the land, and molluscs ruled the sea
2
Named Cryptovaranoides microlanius, the lizard dates back to a time when reptiles dominated the land, and molluscs ruled the seaCredit: SWNS

It's teeth are still in tact after all that time.

Named Cryptovaranoides microlanius, the lizard dates back to a time when reptiles dominated the land, and molluscs ruled the sea.

It was the end of the Triassic period, and the beginning of the Jurassic era, also known as the age of dinosaurs.

However, the tiny skeleton has been the source of much debate.

READ MORE ON ARCHAEOLOGY

Scientists have gone back and forth over the identity of the specimen since the first study on the fossil was published in 2022.

Dr David Whiteside, lead author of the original study that came out in , has addressed the criticism in a follow-up published in .

He confirmed "that the little Bristol reptile is indeed the world’s oldest modern-type lizard”.

The lizard has not only been declared the oldest known lizard, but has pushed back the emergence of these animals by roughly 30million years.

“We were therefore surprised, perhaps even shocked, that in 2023 another team of academics suggested that Cryptovaranoides was not a lizard or even a lizard relative, but in fact an archosauromorph, more closely related to crocodilians and dinosaurs,” co-author Professor Michael Benton said in a statement.

Watch as incredible new drone vid shows world’s longest dinosaur tracks from long-necked sauropod 150 MILLION years ago

The Bristol team returned to the original specimen, putting the tiny skeleton through another round of X-ray and CT scans.

The results revealed that the skull, jaws, teeth, and limb bones showed Cryptovaranoides to be a lizard, not an archosauropmorph. 

“The result of all this had to be tested by a phylogenetic analysis,” added Whiteside.

“This is where we code hundreds of anatomical features in Cryptovaranoides and other modern and fossil lizards, as well as various archosauromorphs.

"We ran the analysis time after time, and it gave our original result, that the little Bristol reptile is indeed the world’s oldest modern-type lizard.”

The results revealed that the skull, jaws, teeth, and limb bones showed Cryptovaranoides to be a lizard, not an archosauropmorph
2
The results revealed that the skull, jaws, teeth, and limb bones showed Cryptovaranoides to be a lizard, not an archosauropmorphCredit: David Whiteside
Topics