The skeleton of a 100 million-year-old fish “with an incredibly swordfish-like head and monstrous teeth” has been unearthed in the remote outback town of Richmond in Queensland, Australia, according to marine fossil museum Kronosaurus Korner.

One family found the “lance-like snout” of the ancient creature, while another family found its “complete skull, massive teeth, vertebrae and the front fins,” said Kronosaurus Korner curator and interpretation manager, Patrick Smith.

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The newly discovered bones belong to a species called Australopachycormus hurleyi, a nearly 10-foot-long “swordfish-like predator with a pointed snout that was probably used to slash or stun prey,” Smith told ABC News today.

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“Fossils of Australopachycormus are exceptionally rare, which is demonstrated by the fact that the species was only discovered less than a decade ago,” Smith said. “Previous to this find we had no near-complete remains of the animal in our museum.”

Smith added that without the help of the two families who found the fossils, “specimen such as this recent fish could easily [have] been lost or destroyed.”

The ancient fossil of the fish is currently on display at the museum, which showcases over 1,000 well-preserved fossils discovered in the inland area of the country. Agency
17 Oct, 2016