Prehistoric fossil in Peru sheds light on marine origin of crocodiles
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[May 18, 2022] By
Carlos Valdez
LIMA (Reuters) - The discovery of a
prehistoric crocodile fossil in Peru from around 7 million years ago has
given paleontologists more clues as to how modern crocodiles, all
freshwater creatures in the Andean country, first came to land from the
sea.
According to a Peruvian research team that analyzed jaw and skull
remains of the species, the animal likely would have probably crossed
the Atlantic Ocean to the coast of South America, eventually populating
what is now southern Peru.
Researcher Rodolfo Salas said his team had collected partial skeletons
from the species in recent years, and that after finding a jawbone in
Peru's Sacaco desert in 2020, they understood how these animals evolved
after living in saltwater.
"The new species of crocodile that we are presenting to the world lived
in Sacaco 7 million years ago," Salas said of the species, which he
dubbed Sacacosuchus cordovai. The crocodilian ancestor would have been 4
meters (13 feet) long, he added.
Sacaco is a site where skeletons of prehistoric animals have been found
before. Experts say that millions of years ago the desert was a deep
seabed inhabited by whales, giant sharks and crocodiles, among other
marine species.
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Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi, founder and director of the paleontology
department at the Museum of Natural History of the Universidad
Nacional Mayor de San Marcos, shows the fossil remains of a
crocodile that inhabited the planet seven million years ago, giving
scientists clues about how modern day crocodiles, who live in
freshwater ecosystems, come from the sea, in Lima, Peru May 16,
2022. Picture taken May 16, 2022. REUTERS/Sebastian Castaneda
"We have concluded ... that all marine crocodiles
were animals with long and thin faces, and that there were two
morphotypes," Salas said. "One that fed almost exclusively on fish
and another that had a much more general diet."
The studies were published last week in British scientific journal
The Royal Society.
Southern Peru is a rich source of prehistoric remains.
In March, a team of paleontologists led by Salas presented the skull
fossil of a 12-meter-long (39-foot-long) "sea monster," a predator
that lived 36 million years ago in an ancient ocean along the
central coast of Peru.
(Reporting by Carlos Valdez of Reuters TV; writing by Marco Aquino
and Kylie Madry; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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