Titanic ancient snake was as long as Tyrannosaurus
It was the all-time titan of snakes -- a monster as long as a Tyrannosaurus rex that stalked a steamy South American rain forest after the demise of the dinosaurs and ate crocodiles for breakfast, lunch and dinner.
An international team of scientists on Wednesday announced the discovery in northern
Titanoboa was at least 43 feet long, weighed 2,500 pounds (1,140 kg) and its massive body was at least 3 feet (1 meter) wide, they wrote in the journal Nature.
It lived 58 million to 60 million years ago, when Earth's animal kingdom was still recovering from the mass extinction that doomed the dinosaurs and many other creatures 65 million years ago when an asteroid hit near the
"It is a mind-bogglingly big snake," paleontologist Jason Head of the
Paleontologist Jonathan Bloch of the
Titanoboa was the largest inhabitant of a hot, lush tropical rain forest and probably hunted forms of crocodiles, large fish and big fresh water turtles. It was not venomous and likely lived a lifestyle akin to the large river-dwelling anacondas of today, wrapping around its unfortunate prey.
"This thing is a crocodile eater, catching and eating them in the water," Head said. "It was a bad day for the crocs."
Its ecosystem was similar to today's Amazon rain forest but hotter. The researchers estimated a snake of its size would have needed an average annual temperature in equatorial
Of modern snakes, Titanoboa is most closely related to boa constrictors, except that it was the length of a school bus.
The scientists recovered fossil vertebrae and ribs, but no skull or teeth, from 28 different individuals. They think the largest Titanoboa may have been 49 feet or longer.
Snakes first appeared about 99 million years ago.
Previously, the largest known snake was Gigantophis, which lived about 39 million years ago in
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