A new species of crocodile that lived about 95 million years ago has been discovered in Australia, and researchers have discovered that it ate a dinosaur as its last meal.
Fossils of the crocodile species were first found in 2010 near the Winton Formation in eastern Australia, a rocky bed from the Cretaceous period, when most of the known dinosaurs roamed the Earth.
Some crocodile fossils were partially smashed, but the researchers noted that inside the fossils were many small bones belonging to another animal. Now, researchers at the Australian Dinosaur Age Museum have identified those smaller bones as belonging to a dinosaur. Their findings were published in Gondwana Research Friday.
The freshwater crocodile, named Confractosuchus sauroktonos, which means “broken dinosaur killer,” was more than 8 feet long. But Matt White, the museum’s research associate and principal investigator, said it could have grown even more. The researchers weren’t sure how the crocodile died.
About 35% of the animals have been preserved. He lost his tail and limbs, but his skull was almost complete. The researchers then used X-rays and CT scans to see what bones were inside the remains.
The results showed that the remains belonged to a 4-pound juvenile ornithopod, a group of plant-eating dinosaurs that included duck-billed creatures. The ornithopod remains were also the first of their kind found in Australia, indicating that they are a newly discovered species.
What was left inside the crocodile’s stomach was one ornithopod bone “cut in half” and the other with a bite mark so severe that a mark was left on the teeth. This led researchers to believe that Confructosuchus “either killed the animal outright or excavated it quickly after its death.”
“While Conractosuchus was not a specialist in eating dinosaurs, it would not have overlooked an easy meal, like the tiny remains of ornithopods found in its stomach,” White said.
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The findings were “extremely rare” because there are very few specific examples of dinosaurs being hunted, and the discovery is the first evidence that crocodiles were eating dinosaurs in Australia. In August 2020, researchers discovered the fossils of “terrible crocodiles” that could wipe out large dinosaurs with “banana-sized” teeth.
“It is possible that dinosaurs formed an important resource in the Cretaceous ecological food web,” White said. “Because there are no comparable global specimens, this prehistoric crocodile and its last meals will continue to provide clues to the relationships and behaviors of animals that inhabited Australia millions of years ago.”
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