• Researchers identified fossils in a 100-million-year-old Moroccan freshwater system as a marine reptile.
  • Previously, the reptile was thought to have only spent time in saltwater.
  • Some once believed the reptile could be the Loch Ness monster.

An ocean-dwelling, slender-necked reptile once rumored to be the Loch Ness monster spent part of its life in a freshwater lake, contrary to what researchers previously believed.

Locals in Morocco found fossils belonging to the plesiosaur in a 100-million-year-old freshwater river system. The fossils, which include teeth and a humerus, were then identified by researchers from the University of Bath in the United Kingdom.

The findings were published in the scientific journal Cretaceous Research.

Previously, scientists thought the plesiosaur only lived in saltwater environments, said Nick Longrich, a senior lecturer in the University of Bath’s life sciences department.

Now that the fossils have been discovered in a freshwater environment, the question is whether the plesiosaur was there on a temporary or permanent basis, said Longrich, who was part of the team that studied the fossils.

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Some of the fossils belong to juveniles, which were about the size of a dolphin, he told USA TODAY.

The plesiosaur can grow around 40 feet long, or as big as a whale, and it was known to live in saltwater and eat fish and possibly squid, he said.

But finding plesiosaur fossils in an ancient freshwater system has given the researchers more insight into how the marine reptiles lived.

For example, its neighbors included crocodilia, turtles, fish and a giant, aquatic dinosaur called the spinosaurus. Back then, the spinosaurus would’ve been a competitor and possibly a predator for the plesiosaur, Longrich said.

Could the Loch Ness monster actually have been a plesiosaur?

There’s another reason everyone’s talking about the discovery: 20 to 30 years ago, some people claimed the Loch Ness monster was a surviving plesiosaur, Longrich said.