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dragonlady_mothman
QUOTE
From the blistering sands of the Sahara, paleontologist Paul Sereno has pulled an incredible find: the nearly complete remains of Sarcosuchus imperator, one of the largest crocodilians to ever walk the Earth.


As long as a city bus, and weighing in at about ten tons, “SuperCroc” lives up to its nickname.

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Sarcosuchus imperatoror “flesh crocodile emperor,” lived roughly 110 million years ago, when rivers coursed over what is now sub-Saharan Africa. Sarcosuchus prowled the rivers’ banks, crushing fish—and other creatures—in its massive jaws.


Paleontologists first gave Sarcosuchus imperator a name in the 1960s. Four decades later, in 2000, National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Sereno and his team of fossil hunters found Sarcosuchusremains so enormous they dubbed the creature SuperCroc.

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Sereno and his team, funded in part by the National Geographic Society, pored through the hot sands of a fossil graveyard called Gadoufaoua in Niger, unearthing scores of Sarcosuchus remains, including vertebrae, limb bones, armor plates, jaws, and a nearly complete 6-foot (1.8-meter) skull.


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From their find, Sereno believes SuperCroc weighed as much as ten tons and measured as long as 40 feet (12 meters).

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Now Sereno has teamed with National Geographic’s resident herpetologist, Brady Barr. They’re studying today’s tiny-by-comparison crocodilians—alligators, crocodiles, caimans, and gavials—to learn more about the giant SuperCroc, which is undoubtedly one of the largest crocs that ever lived.
source

QUOTE
Paleontologist Paul Sereno has uncovered the remains of a giant prehistoric crocodile from the African Sahara that dwarfs its modern counterparts.

The animal, called Sarcosuchus imperator (“flesh crocodile emperor”), grew to a length of 40 feet and weighed eight tons, twice as much as an elephant. Modern crocodiles rarely exceed 14 feet and weigh no more than half a ton.

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“This crocodile was probably capable of pulling down just about any dinosaur under the right circumstances,” said Sereno, Professor in Organismal Biology & Anatomy and a National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence. “It would have been a force to be reckoned with on the shoreline. It would have been a dinosaurís nightmare.”

Nicknamed “SuperCroc,” fossils of Sarcosuchus were first discovered by French paleontologist Albert-Felix de Lapparent and named in 1966 by France de Broin and fellow paleontologist Philippe Taquet. But until now, the animal was known only from fragmentary remains.

During expeditions to the TÈnÈrÈ Desert of Niger, Africa, in 1997 and 2000, Sereno and his research team recovered several partial skeletons of SarcosuchusThey published a detailed description of the animal’s anatomy in the journal Scienceas part of the Science Express Web site on Thursday, Oct. 25. The paper also will be published in the Friday, Nov. 16 print issue of Science.

Sereno’s co-authors are Hans Larsson (Ph.D., ’00) of Yale University, Christian Sidor (Ph.D. ’00) of the New York College of Osteopathic Medicine and BoubÈ Gado of Niger’s Institut de Recherches en Sciences Humaines.

Sereno found the remains of Sarcosuchus in the same 110-million-year-old layer of sediments where he discovered Suchomimus in 1997. Suchomimus, a two-legged fish-eating predator, measured 36 feet long and 12 feet high at the hips. But it would have had to be on the alert for surprise attacks from the stealthy Sarcosuchus, Sereno said.

Like a modern-day gharial of India, Sarcosuchus would have kept a low profile in the water. When a gharial floats down a river, “if you’re lucky you see a couple of eyeballs and the nostrils,” Sereno said.

Sarcosuchus sports jaws studded with more than 100 bone-crushing teeth and an enormous, bowl-shaped snout. The unusual snout may have enhanced the animal’s sense of smell, or it may have been used to make sounds. Gharials, Sereno said, are highly communicative. “They’re vibrating and belching and growling and hissing all the time, sometimes even in the water,” he said.

Despite certain similarities to the much smaller gharial, Sarcosuchus went extinct with the dinosaurs and is not directly related to modern crocodiles. Nevertheless, measurements of living crocodiles that Sereno made in India and Costa Rica helped him to estimate the size of a full-grown Sarcosuchus.

He also studied the growth layers in the scutesóthe armored plates along the back of Sarcosuchus. Examination of thin slices under the microscope revealed that the animals continued to grow throughout most of their 50- to 60-year life spans, twice as long as modern crocodiles.

As on three previous expeditions to Africa, Sereno’s team probed remote areas of the continent in temperatures reaching 125 degrees Fahrenheit for its fossil treasures. The team found that Sarcosuchus had plenty of crocodilian company in the broad rivers that flowed across the lush plains during the Cretaceous Period. Plying the same rivers were the doglike Araripesuchus and a newly discovered species, yet to be named, that attained a full-grown length of only two feet.

The National Geographic Society and the David and Lucille Packard Foundation funded the 2000 expedition, and the Pritzker Foundation was instrumental in the cleaning of the fossils in Sereno’s laboratory.

A cast of the six-foot skull of Sarcosuchus is on display in the lobby of the John Crerar Library. A more extensive exhibition is under preparation for the city of Chicago early in 2002.

The National Geographic Channel will air a special television presentation on Sarcosuchus and modern crocodiles on Sunday, Dec. 9. Sereno also will write about his discovery, and the article will be published in the December issue of National Geographic magazine.


More information about Sarcosuchus is at Project Exploration’s SuperCroc Web site athttp://www.supercroc.com/index.htm


source

Think Megalodon, but with crocodillians.
DJ_Quinn
The Megaldon Hunter?
theoric
i saw something on this on PBS a while ago. fascinating creature. the life-size model of it was truly impressive.
ALNA70
QUOTE(hyperactive @ May 24 2005, 01:54 AM)
i saw something on this on PBS a while ago.  fascinating creature.  the life-size model of it was truly impressive.
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I saw the same special. The model of the croc looked truely frightening!!
dragonlady_mothman
...so, anyone planning on riding a boat through a Louisiana swamp this summer? tongue.gif
NightStalker
Amazing! ohmy.gif That just support the theory of evolution, because, incredibly there is still people who still believe that God created all species at the same time, and here we are all today!

As for you question, I would say that it eat's a little bit more that an iguana! w00t.gif thumbsup.gif

Interesting article indeed...
DJ_Quinn
I think it must be eating steroids....
The Roswell Man
man
how many handbags can that make? huh.gif w00t.gif w00t.gif
lol grin2.gif
Dr1273
QUOTE(The Roswell Man @ May 24 2005, 04:41 PM)
man
how many handbags can that make? huh.gif  w00t.gif  w00t.gif
lol grin2.gif
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LOL...or boots!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Conspiracy
QUOTE(DJ_Quinn @ May 24 2005, 07:11 AM)
I think it must be eating steroids....
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xD ya dino steroids
openmind1963
they need to make an animal face off,super croc vs megladon.my money's on the fi$h! thumbsup.gif
Undefined_innocence
ooooooo.. good idea. They have a show like that on animal planet.. but ive only seen them doing animals that live today.
dragonlady_mothman
QUOTE(openmind1963 @ May 24 2005, 04:48 PM)
they need to make an animal face off,super croc vs megladon.my money's on the fi$h! thumbsup.gif
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i think they did gator versus shark before...shark won because it didnt have to surface.
greattenchim
anything it damn well wants!
Conspiracy
megalodon would win tongue.gif
Falco Rex
Let's see Old Steve Irwin try to hold that bad mutha' down! tongue.gif
XSAS
I have swam across many croc and aligator infested rivers in my time knowing they are there... but I would certainly think twice if I thought this fella was about... and in reply to your initial question "what does a 40ft Croc eat"............. anything it wants.
Odinson
Is Super Crocs jaw strong enough to hold and pull down dinosaurs?
dragonlady_mothman
they think so.
The Roswell Man
if not, what else culd it have eaten...?? huh.gif hmm.gif w00t.gif unsure.gif
Odinson
Fish. Marine reptiles. Smaller crocs. I need to do some research on gharials.

I remember watching this croc hunter dude, not Steve Irwin. He was American or Canadian. He loves reptiles, and thinks nothing of lions. He was on a quest to become the first man to capture every species on Earth. He had a special on MSNBC where he was searching for the Cave crocodile.

Anyway, he was capturing some of India's gharials. I heard him tell the other dude and us, that they need to be careful with the gharials jaws and snout. They might break if they aren't careful with them.

The gharial's jaws:
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The Roswell Man
indicating weak jaws...
are the artist impression of the beast based on fossills found and put 2gether using sumthing like cg..?? ohmy.gif huh.gif unsure.gif
Odinson
The gharial is primarily a fish eater. It's limbs are weak and they are extememly shy around humans. Their jaw is designed for less water resistance, so they are quicker when catching fish in water. Some off the larger gharial, I guess those approaching 20 ft, will take mamals. I don't know what kind of mamals.
Info on Gharials: http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/natsci/herpetolog...cs/csp_ggan.htm

The below pic is that of the Slatwater croc's jaws, the largest croc in existence. To me it's jaws look strong and powerful. "Large adults occasionally take much larger prey include buffalo and domestic livestock, wild boar, monkeys etc."
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Info on Saltwater Crocs.
http://www.flmnh.ufl.edu/natsci/herpetolog...cs/csp_cpor.htm


So I have my doubts about whether even supercroc can take down ten tons of dinosaur, in such slender jaws.
Odinson
QUOTE(The Roswell Man @ May 26 2005, 02:53 PM)
indicating weak jaws...
are the artist impression of the beast based on fossills found and put 2gether using sumthing like cg..?? ohmy.gif  huh.gif  unsure.gif
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Whoops! That pic was of the gharials jaws. Not supercroc. Supercroc's jaws are nowhere near as slender, but still slender for such a large creature. I wonder if it was strong enough to drag down dinosaurs.

If it's jaws were built like the Saltwater croc, then I would have no doubt it would be a dinosuar killer.
Odinson
Maybe I was wrong. Those huge front teeth could've been used to grab and hold dinosaurs. Maybe small dinos though.
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fallingalien
to prove the T rex and the gator are almost the same. they didn't change, they are just related
dragonlady_mothman
they said it could eat dinos on the part of the show i watched (i didnt get to see all of it, but they wouldnt have put a CGA of SuperCroc dragging away an iguanodon {Dragonlady used to be quite the dino expert!} if it couldnt take them down)
Odinson
QUOTE(dragonlady_mothman @ May 26 2005, 10:11 PM)
they said it could eat dinos on the part of the show i watched (i didnt get to see all of it, but they wouldnt have put a CGA of SuperCroc dragging away an iguanodon {Dragonlady used to be quite the dino expert!} if it couldnt take them down)
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I saw the same program. And I saw another program about Supercroc. I thought the dino it caught was a Hadrosaur of some type.

Come to think of it, Dr. Brady Barr was in the program where they made the sculpture of Supercroc. He was the same guy I was referencing about the gharials and their delicate jaws. If he says Supercroc ate dinos, I can't argue with him.

Odinson used to love reading about dinosaurs too. geek.gif But he had no one to share his passion with. sad.gif
Shai_Hulud
Note though the Sarchosuchus jaws are slim in comparison with its body, very similar to a ghavial. The jaws indicate its feeding pattern, maybe the ghavial is occupying the same niche the once sarchosuchus did?
DJ_Quinn
Thqat would indicate it was primarily a fish eater, and probably an opurtunistic meat eater.
dragonlady_mothman
I could be mistremembering the dinosaurs they had...but they looked like iguanodon to me.
Odinson
QUOTE(dragonlady_mothman @ May 27 2005, 08:51 AM)
I could be mistremembering the dinosaurs they had...but they  looked like iguanodon to me.
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Sorry about the nitpicking. I don't know why I do that. blush.gif Especially since I can't recall the truth. crying.gif
dragonlady_mothman
it's alright.
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