science

'Like swallowing a dinner plate': 180 million-year-old fish may have choked to death on its supersized supper


a fossilized fish that died after eating a huge ammonite

The tuna-like Pachycormus macropterus got an ammonite lodged inside its body just before it died, researchers found.  (Image credit: Samuel Cooper)

A dinosaur-era fish appears to have died after getting eyes too big for its stomach and ingesting a giant shell, researchers have found. The fish may have then choked to death on it, or the shell tore its stomach as it swallowed, the team said. 

Scientists in Germany found the fish with the shell of an ammonite — an extinct group of marine mollusks — stuck inside it. This is the first time a fossilized fish has been discovered with an intact, large ammonite inside its body, Samuel Cooper, a doctoral candidate at the State Museum of Natural History Stuttgart in Germany, told Live Science.



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