Long-forgotten
remains of a long-forgotten species, have been discovered in a museum
drawer in Scotland. The beast, a dolphin-shaped crocodilian "super
predator," was able to eat other species its size and larger.
The ancient newfound crocodilian is named Tyrannoneustes lythrodectikos, Greek for "blood-biting tyrant swimmer." Sounds pretty friendly, doesn't it? "Tyrannoneustes was a dolphinlike crocodile that lived 165 million years ago," said researcher Mark Young, a vertebrate paleontologist at the University of Edinburgh in Scotland and the University of Southampton in England.
The
predator possessed a long snout, large flippers, armorless skin and a
tail fin where the bottom half is larger than the top half, resembling
an upside-down version of an ordinary shark's tail fin.It's uncertain
how large Tyrannoneustes was, but the right side of its lower jaw was at
least 26 inches (67 centimeters) long. It featured enlarged teeth with
serrated edges, and a jaw that evolved to open wider, allowing it to
swallow smaller prey whole.
Back when Tyrannoneustes was alive, the area in central England where the fossils were discovered was covered in a shallow sea encompassing much of what is now Europe. Originally found between 1907 and 1909, the fossil has been lost in a drawer at the Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery in Glasgow for nearly 100 years.
Back when Tyrannoneustes was alive, the area in central England where the fossils were discovered was covered in a shallow sea encompassing much of what is now Europe. Originally found between 1907 and 1909, the fossil has been lost in a drawer at the Hunterian Museum and Art Gallery in Glasgow for nearly 100 years.
There are no modern descendents of the animal. Instead, this predator was a kind of metriorhynchid, an extinct family of marine crocodiles.
The discovery of Tyrannoneustes shows that during the Middle Jurassic, metriorhynchid crocodiles were beginning to evolve into predators of large-bodied prey. By the Late Jurassic, numerous metriorhynchid species were suited to feeding on large prey, but Tyrannoneustes is the first known from the Middle Jurassic. How this impacted upon other predatory groups such as pliosaurs and ichthyosaurs is still unclear.
Future
research can scan Tyrannoneustes bones to develop computer models of
how it might have fed, Young said. He and his colleagues detailed their
findings online Jan. 4 in the Journal of Systematic Palaeontology.
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