The first known specimen of
Albertonectes was discovered in 2007 near the
St. Mary River, near the town of
Lethbridge, in southern
Alberta,
Canada. It was discovered unexpectedly by an excavator during
ammolite mining carried out by the company
Korite International Ltd. At the initial moment of the discovery, the excavator accidentally broke part of the fossils coming from the middle of the animal's
trunk, including an unknown quantity of
gastroliths (stomach stones). A large part of these fossils have since been noted as lost, and due to the unique character of the specimen as well as its excellent preservation, it was subsequently decided to leave it as is and not to remove any elements found there. This specimen, since housed at the
Royal Tyrrell Museum of Palaeontology and numbered as TMP 2007.011.0001, consists of an almost complete and articulated skeleton of a large
plesiosaur, but the
skull is missing. More precisely, it includes 132 vertebrae from the
atlas-axis complex to fused tip of the
tail vertebrae, a complete
pectoral but an incomplete
pelvic girdle, almost complete forelimbs and hindlimbs, disarticulated
ribs, an
abdominal rib, and at least 97 associated
gastroliths. The skeleton also preserves two teeth coming from the
lamniform shark Squalicorax, the few traces of grooves present on the left
coracoid indicating that the specimen would have been
scavenged after its death.
Stratigraphically, the skeleton was exhumed in an area dating from the middle of the late
Campanian of the
Bearpaw Formation, a period located around 73.5 million years ago. In 2012, Japanese paleontologist Tai Kubo and his Canadian colleagues Mark T. Mitchell and Donald M. Henderson
described the specimen as the
holotype of a new
genus and
species of
elasmosaurid named
Albertonectes vanderveldei. The genus name
Albertonectes comes from Alberta, in reference to the
province where the animal was discovered, and from the
Ancient Greek word (, "swimmer"). The
specific name is named in honor of Rene Vandervelde, the founder of the Korite International, the gem-mining company that discovered the holotype.
Albertonectes represents the first significantly complete plesiosaur to be discovered in the Bearpaw Formation, as well as the second elasmosaurid to be identified in the same formation after
Terminonatator in 2003. On November 9, 2015, it was reported to the Royal Tyrrell Museum that some articulated vertebrae were discovered in conditions similar to those previously mentioned, still near Lethbridge. Subsequently, more vertebrae were discovered by Korite workers, but due to the particularly difficult conditions in winter, the recovery of the fossils had to be done quickly. The fossils recovered consist of a partial skeleton preserving a
vertebral column running from the base of the neck to the base of the tail, followed by a few articulated and disarticulated ribs. The discovery was made official the following year by Canadian paleontologist
Darren H. Tanke via a summary, in which he referred this specimen as
cf. Albertonectes. ==Description==