HomeScienceScientists reveal fossil of tree-climbing reptile from Jurassic era after 90 years

Scientists reveal fossil of tree-climbing reptile from Jurassic era after 90 years

The fossil was first found in the 1930s in Germany’s Solnhofen limestone, famous for preserving Jurassic life. One half ended up in Frankfurt’s Senckenberg Museum.

July 04, 2025 / 11:29 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Ancient Fossil Puzzle Solved: Tree-Climbing Reptile Revealed After 90 Years (Image: Victor Beccari, SNSB/LMU)
Ancient Fossil Puzzle Solved: Tree-Climbing Reptile Revealed After 90 Years (Image: Victor Beccari, SNSB/LMU)

Sometimes, history hides in plain sight. That’s what a young palaeontologist found when two fossil halves, separated for nearly 90 years, finally came together. This rare reunion has revealed the full skeleton of Sphenodraco scandentis, a long-limbed, tree-climbing reptile from the Jurassic era.

Fossil Halves Reunited Across Two Museums
The fossil was first found in the 1930s in Germany’s Solnhofen limestone, famous for preserving Jurassic life. One half ended up in Frankfurt’s Senckenberg Museum. For decades, it was thought to belong to Homoeosaurus maximiliani, a lizard-like reptile.

Story continues below Advertisement

Recently, Victor Beccari, a doctoral student at the Bavarian State Collection, discovered a matching fossil at the Natural History Museum in London. DNA barcoding and skeletal analysis confirmed it as the missing half.

Researchers now know both fossils belong to a new species—Sphenodraco scandentis. The full reconstruction offers a rare look at the early evolution of tree-dwelling reptiles. “The fossils were separated almost a century ago and the link was lost,” said Beccari.