Out of a drawer and into your nightmares
comes a vicious ancient beast
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[April 19, 2019]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - When Ohio University
integrative biologist Nancy Stevens peered into a drawer in the wooden
cabinets on the top floor of a Nairobi museum in 2010, she saw a chunk
of rock containing massive teeth and knew she had come across something
important.
The overlooked fossils stored at the National Museums of Kenya belonged
to one of the largest meat-eating mammals ever to walk the Earth, a
beast called Simbakubwa kutokaafrika that stalked Africa 22 million
years ago, according to research by Stevens and co-author Matthew Borths
published on Thursday.
Bigger than any carnivorous land mammal alive today - even a polar bear
- Simbakubwa's skull was the size of a rhino's, its eight-inch (20-cm)
canine teeth as large as bananas. It weighed about a ton and was 8 feet
long (2-1/2 meters) snout to rump.
According to the research published in the Journal of Vertebrate
Paleontology, the fossils were excavated around 1980 in western Kenya
and never closely examined.
"Most of the specimens that I study are quite small, so you can imagine
my surprise when I opened a drawer that I hadn't examined yet, and saw
the enormous teeth glinting up at me. The specimen had been collected
decades before, and the team that discovered this fossil was more
focused on other parts of the fauna, particularly primates," Stevens
said.
Simbakubwa was a member of a group called hyaenodonts that appeared 62
million years ago, 4 million years after the extinction of the dinosaurs
paved the way for mammalian dominance, and went extinct 9 million years
ago.
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Simbakubwa kutokaafrika, an extinct carnivorous mammal with a skull
as large as that of a rhinoceros and enormous piercing canine teeth,
is seen in this artist's illustration in a size comparison with a
human released in Athens, Ohio, U.S., on April 18, 2019. Courtesy
Mauricio Anton/Handout via REUTERS
Hyaenodonts preceded carnivore groups like cats, bears, hyenas and
wolves, and were closely related to none of them.
"At first glance, it would have looked like a gigantic hyena or
long-tailed wolf with a head that was a little too big for its body.
I imagine something like the 'wargs' from 'Lord of the Rings,'" said
Borths, a Duke Lemur Center paleontologist, referring to fictional
monstrous wolves.
Simbakubwa's name means "big lion" in Swahili though it was not a
cat. It was the largest predator in its ecosystem, a fragmented
forest inhabited by early apes, hippo relatives and elephant
relatives, and was probably the largest carnivorous land mammal in
Africa up to that time.
"It was not an animal built for long efficient runs across open
ground. Instead, its foot was flexed. Carnivores with this posture
tend to be ambush hunters like tigers rather than pursuit hunters
like wolves," Borths said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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