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Moroccan Cretaceous Dinosaur Teeth

Carcharodontosaurus, Early Cretaceous, Moroccan Sahara, Northern Africa

Carcharodontosaurus was a fast moving theropod named "Shark-toothed reptile" because of it's sharp, blade like teeth. Theropods are bipedal, meat-eating dinosaurs closely related to birds. They were more rare than the herbivorous dinosaurs. Up to 20% of the overall dinosaur population were theropods, although they could make up to as much as 50% of the species diversity. Carcharodontosaurus possibly rivals T-rex as the largest carnivore to walk the earth. See June 1996 National Geographic for more information.

Sauropod - Diplodocid, Early Cretaceous, Moroccan Sahara

Northern Africa

The painting on the right by Mark Hallett (click the image to zoom) was printed in the June 1996 isue of National Geographic Magazine as a part of the story about African Dinosaurs. Copies of National Geographic Magazine are available for $5.00 each from the National Geographic Society in Washington D.C. 1-800-777-2800

Sauropods are very large, quadrupedal, (four-footed) herbivorous (plant eating) animals with small heads and long necks. Sauropod trackway data show that the juveniles and adults stayed together in herds. The parents were evidently protective of their young.

 

Spinosaurus, Early Cretaceous, Moroccan Sahara, Northern Africa

Spinosaurus was enormous 39 feet long, ranking with the largest of the carnosaurs. Broad, club-shaped spines, 6. 5 feet long projected upward from the backbone and would have been covered over with skin forming a "sail" or "fin". It is not known for sure what the sail was used for but some speculate it could have been used to collect and dissipate heat depending on it's orientation to the sun's warming rays. This may have given Spinosaurus an advantage if warm blood made him faster than his cold blooded prey. Others believe that his decorative sail may have helped him attract a mate. Both are reasonable possiblities.

Go to the following URL for the latest on a newly discovered type of Spinosaurus. We copied the text below just in case the page is no longer posted on the web. The abcnews site has photos and other goodies for you to enjoy so best to go there to learn more. Here is the URL. Please bookmark us before you leave.

http://www.abcnews.com/sections/science/DailyNews/dinosaur981112.html

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<Picture: Trex>
This 36-foot-long Suchomimus tenerensis had razor teeth, a long pointy snout and foot-long curved claws, which you can see in the lower left corner. Uncovered in the Sahara, it now stands at the National Geographic Society in Washington, D.C. (AP Photo/Dennis Cook)
By Paul Recer
The Associated Press
W A S H I N G T O N,   Nov. 12 — It was a monster dinosaur built for catching fish, with cone-shaped teeth, a long snout and foot-long curved claws that could hook and hold the big ones.
     Researchers who found the fossil of this 36-foot-long animal believe it is a previously unknown species big enough and mean enough to have dominated its world 100 million years ago.
     <Picture: Suchomimus>
This artist's rendering shows what was a the dominant predator of its day. This one was the size of T. rex—and wasn't even fully grown. (AP Photo/National Geographic Society)
The new species, to be called Suchomimus tenerensis, “was an impressive-sized beast,” said Paul Sereno, a University of Chicago paleontologist who found the fossils last year in Africa.
     “If you were standing next to it, your eye level would be at its knee,” Sereno said at a news conference at National Geographic headquarters today. “This animal was easily the size of Tyrannosaurus rex. And it was not fully grown.”
     Suchomimus apparently was a fish eater, said Sereno, but it could threaten virtually anything around it.

The Boss
“With its forearms and its jaws, it would have been able to take down just about anything,” Sereno said. “It was the dominant predator of its time.”
     The animal was generally shaped like the T. rex, with two large hind legs, a powerful tail, forearms and a toothy head, Sereno said in a study being published Friday in the journal Science.
     <Picture: Location of fossil find>One hundred million years ago, this area was lush and supported many dinosaurs, including the fearsome predator recently uncovered. (Marco Doelling/ABCNEWS.com) But Suchomimus was a member of a group of animals called spinosaurids that lived in the lands that became Africa, Europe and South America between 90 million and 120 million years ago. At that time, T. rex was just emerging in North America.
     The discovery “provides important new insights on the evolution and adaptation” of the spinosaur group of dinosaurs, said Thomas R. Holtz Jr., a University of Maryland researcher.

Lush Climate
The fossil was found in Niger, a central African country on the southwestern edge of the Sahara. In the dinosaur era, the area “was a lush climate that could support many different species of dinosaurs,” Sereno said.
     The animal’s most distinctive feature is its long, pointed jaw, armed with about 100 teeth. The end of the jaw is tipped with an extra chin-like projection, called a rosette, that actually contains the largest teeth. The top and bottom teeth mesh together to securely hook prey, a design common among fish-eating animals.
     “The jaw is really very much like a crocodile’s,” Sereno said. “It was built for snaring and swallowing.”
     Suchomimus’ teeth also are typical of fish-eating crocodiles, lightly curved and hooked and not designed for chewing.
     The animal’s thumbs were about 16 inches long and tipped with 12-inch claws curved like a sickle. The two fingers on each hand had shorter, curved claws.

‘Amazing’ Hand Useful for Fishing
“The hand is amazing,” Sereno said. “It was probably ideal for fishing, for grabbing ... into those large fish.”
     It’s not known how the newly discovered Suchomimus died, but it apparently was swept into a river, rolled over and over and was then buried by soil. When found in extreme desert, wind had eroded the sands that had covered it for 100 million years.
     Other fossils found nearby suggest the area had been lush, with water and fish that attracted many predators.
     At least four species of fish up to six feet long lived in the waters where Suchomimus hunted, Sereno said. There also were giant crocodiles.
     “The most common thing we stumbled on is a very long-snouted and very large crocodile,” said Sereno. “We collected a six-foot skull. The crocodile would have been about 50 feet long.”

Fought With Crocodiles for Food
It is likely, he said, that the giant crocodiles and Suchomimus competed for the same large fish, “and I imagine the two squared off.”
     Soaring above were flying dinosaurs with 12-foot wing spans, poised to attack from the air with wicked teeth and claws, he said. Fossils for those animals also were found.
     “We think that area was pretty well maxed-out so far as the number of large animals you could put into that environment,” said Sereno.
     And ruling it all, he said, was Suchomimus. <Picture>

Copyright 1998 Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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