Sir David Attenborough discusses his new film ‘Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster’ – a documentary about the discovery of an enormous pliosaur skull on England’s south coast.

By BBC Wildlife Magazine

Published: Tuesday, 02 January 2024 at 19:25 PM


Sir David Attenborough and the Executive Producer of ‘Attenborough and the Giant Sea Monster’ Mike Gunton discuss the romance of fossil hunting and unearthing the find of a lifetime.

Interview with Sir David Attenborough and Executive Producer Mike Gunton

Interviewer: What is this film about?

David Attenborough: This film is about the discovery of the skull of an extraordinary monster of the seas – one of the biggest predators the world has ever seen. The skull is the most important part of an animal, and what you can deduce from the skull is absolutely fascinating. 

Imagine that you were from Mars, and when you landed on Earth all you could find were human skeletons but not a single one with a skull. You wouldn’t know anything about it at all – you wouldn’t know what it fed on, how it could move, you wouldn’t know what it could see – it would be useless. 

Well, that is more or less was the situation we were in as far as this particular pliosaur was concerned. The skull had the potential to be the most informative find of any pliosaur ever made but unfortunately, or initially unfortunately, it was only the end tip of this huge skull that was found. But the skull is the most informative part of any skeleton, and it promised to have all those details in it if you could only get it out…

This is the story of how it was got out, and how it was examined by scientists with all kinds of latest state-of-the-art equipment, how they were able to interpret it and tell us new things about pliosaurs, one of the biggest carnivorous creatures the world has ever seen.