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Well, after the dust has settled from the crew bus, and the
cameramen have finished trampling on the bones, and the television
interest in Leedsichthys has once again waned after its peak
in September-November 2003 (8/9/2003 The Big Monster Dig on C4, and
23/11/2003 Sea Monsters:A Walking With Dinosaurs Trilogy), what have
we learned? And, perhaps more importantly, what do we have to unlearn?
Perhaps one important thing is the vagaries of model design for
computer-generated animation - RDF and the BBC both had models of Leedsichthys
made for their respective series, and asked the opinions of
myself and Dave Martill over a very short deadline timeframe. RDF's
team (Rhys Griffin of Clockwork Digital being the man on the ground)
was outstanding, and struggled hard to incorporate all the
modifications that we suggested. In comparison, the BBC's team
(Impossible Pictures, seasoned from work on all the 'Walking With
'
franchise products) ignored almost all of the suggestions made by Dave
and myself, and kept pretty much to their original model (dubbed the
'Budweiser lizard fish' for obvious reasons) - which apparently was
nearly completed before Dave and myself were involved. Sometimes,
'involving an expert' is merely an example of gesture politics - the
aim is not necessarily to strive for accuracy, but merely to go
through the motions, and be able to tick the relevant box afterwards.
But one thing that the Impossible Pictures team is most definitely to
be commended for, is not going over the top in the size of the fish.
At 22 metres, their Leedsichthys may be large, but it is not
excessive.
Size isn't everything - or is it? Leedsichthys was a
remarkably large animal. Despite the paucity of its remains, it seems
to be the largest bony fish ever - although it only needs to be over
11 metres in length (the size of the King of Herrings, the living
contender) to claim that title.
This is different from the largest fish of ANY kind ever, as there
are a few living cartilaginous fishes (eg whale shark, basking shark)
and extinct (Megalodon) that are significantly larger than
that figure. Estimates for extinct cartilaginous fishes Edestus
and Helicoprion have occasionally gone over the 15 metre
mark, but these seem to be utterly unsupportable figures.
Similarly, Leedsichthys was well short of the length of the
largest aquatic vertebrate known - the blue whale, which is a mammal
that can grow up to 25 metres in size.
The first published estimated size of Leedsichthys appears
to have been one of 30 feet [=9 metres], by Arthur Smith Woodward in
1905. This was through comparison with the related Pachycormid fish
Hypsocormus. But since the mid eighties, Leedsichthys
has been estimated to be larger and larger - with the supporting
evidence becoming smaller and smaller for each subsequent increase in
size.
The first estimates that exceeded 20 metres appeared in 1986
(Martill, 1986). Accepting the partial and incomplete nature of the
remains of Leedsichthys that were known, he determined to
estimate the full length of the animal, by comparing it to a specimen
of a Pachycormid fish that he had recently discovered in the Oxford
Clay near Peterborough. He looked at a variety of skeletal components
- including the hyomandibulae, the tail, the pectoral fin -from
different specimens of Leedsichthys . Scaling between these
components and the new Pachycormid fish, he came up with the following
sizes: |