Remains of 'Godzilla' croc found

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Keevan_Colton
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Remains of 'Godzilla' croc found

Post by Keevan_Colton »

The fossilised remains of a crocodile that ruled the oceans 140 million years ago have been discovered in Patagonia.

Scientists have nicknamed the creature Godzilla, because of its dinosaur-like snout and jagged teeth.

The US-Argentine team of researchers believes the animal was a ferocious predator, feeding on other marine reptiles and large sea creatures.

The species is formally known as Dakosaurus andiniensis and has been unveiled in the journal Science.

Strange morphology

Unlike modern crocodiles, it lived entirely in the water, and had fins instead of legs. It measured 4m (13ft) from nose to tail and its jaws alone were a third of a metre (1ft) long.

Crocodiles evolved during the late Permian and became widespread during the Cretaceous (146 to 65 million years ago).

Other marine crocodiles alive then had long, slim snouts and needle-like teeth, which they used to catch small fish and molluscs. But this creature had a dinosaur-like snout and large, serrated teeth.

"These sorts of features are also present in carnivorous dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus rex," said co-researcher Diego Pol, of Ohio State University in Columbus, US.

"It shows a really unexpected morphology that nobody thought could be present in a marine crocodile."

Family tree

Palaeontologist Zulma Gasparini, of the National University of La Plata, Argentina, first came across a "Godzilla" specimen in 1996 in the Neuquen Basin, once a deep tropical bay of the Pacific Ocean.

But it was little more than a fragment and provided few clues to the creature's nature and habits.

However, two further specimens have recently been discovered, including a complete fossilised skull.

Computer analysis of the bones shows D. andiniensis belongs on the family tree of crocodiles. Scientists believe it evolved a different feeding strategy from its contemporaries.

The shape and size of its jaws and teeth suggest it hunted large marine vertebrates such as the giant marine reptile, Ichthyosaurus, rather than small fish.
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Akhlut
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Post by Akhlut »

Bah, 4 meters long? That's nothing compared to Sarcosuchus imperator, the "flesh crocodile emperor." It's 3 times as long with jaws half the length of Dakosaurus. :wink:

Still, really cool find. Weird looking skull, though; almost kind of fish-like. Of course, that makes sense, considering it's a marine crocodile. I almost feel sorry that their line went extinct; it'd be interesting to see what they'd have evolved into had they survived.
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Post by Quadlok »

4 meters wouldn't even put it on top in the modern croc world. Salt water crocodile. Do they know when this line of crocodilians bit the dust? Did they go down with the dinosaurs or were the pushed out by the cetaceans and/or sharks?

The most interesting thing I''ve found about this story is that it has at least 3 seperate links on Fark.
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