A tiny, 166-million-year-old fossil lizard unearthed in Scotland shows ‘evolution in action’ according to scientists.
What’s more, the little creature is helping to shed light on how reptiles came into existence.
The complete, well-preserved remains of the 6cm-long creature, which lived during the age of dinosaurs, was discovered in the Isle of Skye in 2016.
Dubbed Bellairsia gracilis, it belongs to a wider animal group known as squamate reptiles.
The experts said their findings, published in the journal Nature, could help in ‘filling gaps in our understanding of evolution and the history of life on Earth’.