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Ancient “Godzilla” crocodile
described
Nov. 10, 2005
Courtesy Ohio State University
and World Science staff
Researchers say they have found evidence of a sea creature that
would have made Tyrannosaurus rex think twice before stepping into the ocean.
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The fossilized skull shown here is about 20
inches (76 cm) long. The largest teeth near the snout (on the right side of the photograph) measure
about four inches (10 cm). (Photo courtesy of Diego Pol, Ohio State University.)
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The researchers described fossils of an ancient crocodile found at the southern tip of South
America whose massive jaws and jagged
teeth would have made it the sea’s most fearsome predator.
Unlike today’s crocodiles, Dakosaurus andiniensis lived entirely in the water, researchers say, and had fins instead of legs.
In addition, its hefty size and T. rex-like snout have earned it the nickname “Godzilla”
from scientists.
Diego Pol of Ohio State University said the oddly shaped fossils belong on the crocodile family tree.
“This species was very unusual, because other marine crocodiles that were around at the same time had very delicate features – long, skinny snouts and needle-like teeth for catching small fish and mollusks,” he said. “But this croc was just the opposite. It had a short snout, and large teeth with serrated edges.”
These features indicate it was a predator of large sea
creatures, he added.
Paleontologists Zulma Gasparini and Luis Spalletti of the National University of La Plata in Argentina uncovered the
fossil bones in Patagonia, a region of South America in southern Argentina and Chile.
Pol used software to map the features of those bones and determine its lineage. Together, they describe the creature in the Nov. 11 issue of the research journal
Science.
The animal measured 13 feet (4 meters) from nose to tail, researchers said. Its jaws were a
18 inches (46 cm) long, with interlocking serrated teeth up to four inches (10
cm) long.
Marine crocodile species of many other sizes lived 135 million years ago, toward the end of the
Jurassic era, but all had long snouts and needle-like teeth, the researchers
said. None were larger than D. andiniensis, nor as robust, they added.
Yet, Pol found that the gargantuan crocodile was more closely related to the smallest of its brethren than any of the larger species.
He explained that the shape of the nostrils, eye sockets, and other areas of the skull combined with a telltale groove in its jaw to
indicate its lineage.
“This is the most remarkable change in the size and shape of the teeth and snout in the history of marine crocs,” Pol said.
The three fossil specimens were found in 1996, the researchers said – one on farmland in the Mendoza province of Patagonia, and two in a rock formation in Neuquén province to the south.
When D. andiniensis lived, the researchers added, the region was a deep tropical bay of the Pacific Ocean.
The researchers don’t yet know what triggered the sudden emergence of the large crocodile, but the size and shape of the teeth indicate that it probably ate other marine reptiles and large sea creatures in the bay instead of small fish.
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