In Peru, skull of 'marine monster' points to fearsome ancient predator
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[March 18, 2022]
By Marco Aquino and Carlos Valdez
LIMA (Reuters) - Paleontologists have
unearthed the skull of a ferocious marine predator, an ancient ancestor
of modern-day whales, which once lived in a prehistoric ocean that
covered part of what is now Peru, scientists announced on Thursday.
The roughly 36-million-year-old well-preserved skull was dug up intact
last year from the bone-dry rocks of Peru's southern Ocucaje desert,
with rows of long, pointy teeth, Rodolfo Salas, chief of paleontology at
Peru's National University of San Marcos, told reporters at a news
conference.
Scientists think the ancient mammal was a basilosaurus, part of the
aquatic cetacean family, whose contemporary descendents include whales,
dolphins and porpoises.
Basilosaurus means "king lizard," although the animal was not a reptile,
though its long body might have moved like a giant snake.
The one-time top predator likely measured some 12 meters (39 feet) long,
or about the height of a four-story building.
"It was a marine monster," said Salas, adding the skull, which has
already been put on display at the university's museum, may belong to a
new species of basilosaurus.
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Members of the media gather around a 36 million-year-old
Basilosaurus whale fossil discovered in the Ocucaje desert, at the
Museum of Natural History, in Lima, Peru March 17, 2022.
REUTERS/Sebastian Castaneda
"When it was searching for its food,
it surely did a lot of damage," added Salas.
Scientists believe the first cetaceans evolved from
mammals that lived on land some 55 million years ago, about 10
million years after an asteroid struck just off what is now Mexico's
Yucatan peninsula, wiping out most life on Earth, including the
dinosaurs.
Salas explained that when the ancient basilosaurus died, its skull
likely sunk to the bottom of the sea floor, where it was quickly
buried and preserved.
"Back during this age, the conditions for fossilization were very
good in Ocucaje," he said.
(Reporting by Marco Aquino and Carlos Valdez; Writing by David Alire
Garcia; Editing by Karishma Singh)
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