The skeleton from the Cretaceous period, with a length of nearly 2 metres, shows all of the characteristic traits of modern marine turtles.
"We described a fossil sea turtle from Colombia that is about 25 million years older (than the previously known oldest specimen)," said Edwin Cadena, a scholar of the Alexander von Humboldt foundation at the Senckenberg Research Institute in Germany.
Cadena made the unusual discovery together with his colleague from the US, J Parham of California State University, Fullerton.
Sea turtles descended from terrestrial and freshwater turtles that arose approximately 230 million years ago.
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During the Cretaceous period, they split into land and sea dwellers. Fossil evidence from this time period is very sparse, however, and the exact time of the split is difficult to verify.
"This lends a special importance to every fossil discovery that can contribute to clarifying the phylogeny of the sea turtles," said Cadena.
The fossilised turtle shells and bones come from two sites near the community of Villa de Leyva in Colombia.
Since then, they have been stored in the collections of the Centro de Investigaciones Paleontologicas in Villa Leyva and the University of California Museum of Paleontology.
Cadena and Parham examined the almost complete skeleton, four additional skulls and two partially preserved shells, and they placed the fossils in the turtle group Chelonioidea, based on various morphological characteristics.
Turtles in this group dwell in tropical and subtropical oceans.
"Based on the animals' morphology and the sediments they were found in, we are certain that we are indeed dealing with the oldest known fossil sea turtle," said Cadena.