Platecarpus had a long, down-turned tail with a large dorsal lobe on it, steering flippers, and jaws lined with conical teeth. A complete specimen LACM 128319 shows that it grew up to long. LACM 128319 preserves matter within the
scleral ring that may possibly be the
retina of the eye. Small structures in the retina, each around 2 μm long and observed by
scanning electron microspectroscopy, may represent retinal
melanosomes preserved in their original positions. The
respiratory tube is also known in LACM 128319, preserved as
cartilaginous tracheal rings. Only the posterior-most end of the tracheal tube – at the end of the neck near the
pectoral girdle – is known. The section where the two
bronchi split was also preserved in the specimen, but was destroyed during excavation. This is an indication that
Platecarpus and other mosasaurs had two functional lungs. Snakes, which are closely related to mosasaurs, have only one functional lung with the second often being vestigial or absent. Unlike terrestrial lizards, however, the bronchi separate in front of the area of the forelimbs rather than at the level of the limbs. Skin impressions are known from
Platecarpus, preserved in LACM 128319 as soft impressions and
phosphate material. Scales on the tip of the snout and the top of the skull are somewhat hexagonal in shape and do not touch one another. The scales on the jaws are longer and rhomboidal in shape, overlapping one another. The scales on the snout indicate that the nostrils were placed far in front of the skull at its tip and faced laterally as in most
squamates and
archosaurs. The body scales are all rhomboidal in shape and form tightly connecting diagonal rows that overlap each other at their posterior edges. They are generally the same size throughout the entire length of the body. The caudal scales on the tail are taller and larger than those of the rest of the body, although those covering the lower surface of the tail are more similar to body scales. Internal organs, or
viscera, may also be preserved in the specimen as reddish areas. One is located in the
thoracic cavity low in the ribcage, while the other is located in the upper portion of the
abdominal cavity just behind the ribcage. The reddish areas were analysed with
mass spectrometry and were shown to contain high levels of compounds made of
iron and
porphyrin. These substances are evidence of
hemoglobin decomposition products that may have formed in the organs as they decomposed. Based on its position, the organ in the thoracic cavity is probably the heart or liver, or even both of those organs. The organ in the abdominal cavity may be a
kidney, although it is in a more anterior position than the kidneys of
monitor lizards, mosasaurs' closest living relatives. The anterior position of the kidneys may have been an adaptation toward a more streamlined body, as their presumed position is similar to that of
cetaceans. Part of the digestive tract is also preserved and is filled with mid-sized fish remains. The shape of these remains may outline the true shape of the corresponding part of the digestive tract, most likely the
colon. The presence of scales and undigested bones in the colon suggests that
Platecarpus and other mosasaurs processed food quickly and did not thoroughly digest and absorb all food in the gastrointestinal tract. Coprolites from the mosasaur
Globidens are also suggestive of low digestion and absorption rates as they contain masses of crushed
bivalve shells. The caudal, or tail vertebrae, are sharply downturned. The vertebrae at the bend (called the caudal peduncle) are wedge-shaped with neural spines that are wider at their ends than they are at their bases. This downturned area likely supported a fluke similar to modern sharks. Two lobes would have been present, a lower one supported by the downturned vertebrae and an upper, unsupported one. The tail fluke was probably hypocercal, meaning that its lower lobe was longer than its upper lobe. This condition is also seen in
ichthyosaurs and
metriorhynchid crocodyliforms. ==History==