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Latest Paleontology News
URL: http://www.nature.com/news/2009/090...ws.2009.80.html
Summary: largest. snake. evar! More detailed summary: Fossil of a snake estimated at 12.8m in length, weighing 1,135kg dating from the mid-Paleocene, about 58-60mya. For those of you metric-impaired, that amounts to about 42ft in length, and about 1+1/4 short tons in weight. The name is aptly appliled: Titanoboa cerrejonensis, or 'titanic boa from Cerrejon' (Cerrejon, Columbia, where the fossils were found). |
GULP!!!
I love snakes but that would be one hell of a HUNGRY PET!! WOW i know a few Snake breeders who would find this link very interesting! thanks for that.. now i'm going to dream about snakes - and i dont mean the trouser snake. lol it's an interesting read.. they are using the fossel as a themometor.. |
There remains much to be discovered about the past, and the further back they go , the more there is to be discovered.
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Just glad I'm in the here and now!
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As this fossil was dated at 60mya, was the species a survivor of the great extinction or an opportunist filling a niche? We'll probably never know unless they find fossils below the KT divide.
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Hmmm. You know, if I copy this link to that site, the next time I tell a woman if she wants to see a "big black snake," the joke's on her if she accuses me of being uncouth! :)
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That is one BIG snake, and one i hope never to come face to face with *L*
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It probably ate mosquitos. :)
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Quote:
The K/T boundry is put at 65 mya: so, this would have popped up about 5-7 million years later. Definitely not a crossover. There's some speculation that the presence of large theropods during the Cretaceous would have kept something like this from evolving; exclusionary niche, and all that. |
Not necessarily GG. If it lived in a tropical environment, anaconda style, it would be more a competitor of the croc than the theropod.
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