Thursday, November 19, 2009

Cretaceous Gondwanan Crocodyliform Diversity


A suite of five ancient crocs, including one with teeth like boar tusks and another with a snout like a duck's bill, have been discovered in the Sahara by National Geographic Explorer-in-Residence Paul Sereno. The five fossil crocs, three of them newly named species, are remains of a bizarre world of crocs that inhabited the southern land mass known as Gondwana some 100 million years ago.

Sereno, a professor at the University of Chicago, and his team unearthed the strange crocs in a series of expeditions beginning in 2000 in the Sahara. Many of the fossils were found lying on the surface of a remote, windswept stretch of rock and dunes. The crocs galloped and swam across present-day Niger and Morocco when broad rivers coursed over lush plains and dinosaurs ruled.

"These species open a window on a croc world completely foreign to what was living on northern continents," Sereno said. The five crocs, along with a closely related sixth species, will be detailed in a paper published in the journal ZooKeys and appear in the November 2009 issue of National Geographic magazine. The crocs also will star in a documentary, "When Crocs Ate Dinosaurs," to premiere at 9 p.m. ET/PT Saturday, Nov. 21, on the National Geographic Channel.


Extensively covered here, here, here, here, here, and here at least. Paper here.

2 comments:

  1. These are some very cool new taxa. I am very excited to see how integrating them and the new characters in Sereno and Larsson's analysis will change the results of my crocodyliform supermatrix.

    Cheers,
    Nick

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  2. They are very interesting. The Mesozoic gets more and more interesting. The Cenozoic looks pretty boring in comparison ecologically.

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