Car-sized prehistoric South American turtle was built for battle
		
		 
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		 [February 13, 2020] 
		By Will Dunham 
		 
		WASHINGTON (Reuters) - One of the largest 
		turtles that ever lived prowled the lakes and rivers of northern South 
		America from about 13 million years ago to 7 million years ago - and 
		this car-sized freshwater beast was built for battle. 
		 
		Scientists said on Wednesday they have unearthed new fossils of the 
		turtle, called Stupendemys geographicus, in Colombia's Tatacoa Desert 
		and Venezuela's Urumaco region that for the first time provide a 
		comprehensive understanding of the big reptile, which got up to 13 feet 
		(4 meters) long and 1.25 tons in weight. 
		 
		Stupendemys males, unlike the females, boasted sturdy front-facing horns 
		on both sides of the carapace - or shell - very close to the neck. Deep 
		scars detected in the fossils indicated that these horns may have been 
		used like a lance for fighting with other Stupendemys males over mates 
		or territory. 
		
		
		  
		
		Fighting occurs among certain turtles alive today, particularly between 
		male tortoises, according to paleontologist Edwin Cadena of the 
		Universidad del Rosario in Bogota, who led the research published in the 
		journal Science Advances. 
		 
		Stupendemys is the second-largest known turtle, behind seagoing Archelon, 
		which lived roughly 70 million years ago at the end of the age of 
		dinosaurs and reached about 15 feet (4.6 meters) in length. 
		 
		The first Stupendemys fossils were found in the 1970s but many mysteries 
		remained about the animal. The new fossils included the largest-known 
		turtle shell - 9.4 feet (2.86 meters) long, even larger than Archelon's 
		shell - and the first lower jaw remains, which gave clues about its 
		diet. 
		 
		"Stupendemys geographicus was huge and heavy. The largest individuals of 
		this species were about the size and length of a sedan automobile if we 
		take into account the head, neck, shell and limbs," Cadena said. 
		 
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			The huge extinct freshwater turtle Stupendemys geographicus, that 
			lived in lakes and rivers in northern South America during the 
			Miocene Epoch, is seen in an illustration released February 12, 
			2020. J. A. Chirinos/Handout via REUTERS. 
            
  
            "Its diet was diverse including small animals - fishes, caimans, 
			snakes - as well as mollusks and vegetation, particularly fruits and 
			seeds. Putting together all the anatomical features of this species 
			indicates that its lifestyle was mostly in the bottom of large 
			freshwater bodies including lakes and large rivers," Cadena added. 
			 
			Stupendemys - meaning "stupendous turtle" - inhabited a colossal 
			wetlands system spanning Colombia, Venezuela, Brazil and Peru before 
			the Amazon and Orinoco rivers were formed. 
			 
			Its large size may have been crucial in defending against formidable 
			predators. It shared the environment with giant crocodilians 
			including the 36-foot-long (11-meter-long) caiman Purussaurus and 
			the 33-foot-long (10-meter-long) gavial relative Gryposuchus. One of 
			the Stupendemys fossils was found with a two-inch-long (5 cm) croc 
			tooth embedded in it. 
			 
			(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler) 
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