Artist’s
reconstruction of dinosaur Joaquinraptor casali. Image courtesy of Andrew
McAfee, Carnegie Museum of Natural History
Joel Kontinen
Crocodiles are living fossils that are with us today. The dinosaur that nibbled it lived
some 66 million years ago, before the extinction of the dinosaurs. That is what
some evolutionists say.
A dinosaur
that may have been one of the fiercest of the Cretaceous period has been
excavated in South America – with an extinct crocodile’s leg in its jaws.
The remains
of the dinosaur, named Joaquinraptor casali – a species of megaraptor
that is new to science – were discovered in the headwaters of the Rio Chico
river in Patagonia, Argentina, in 2019.
Now, Lucio
Ibiricu at the National Scientific and Technical Research Council in
Chubut, Argentina, and his colleagues have studied the fossil in detail, and
were surprised by what they found in the mouth of the near-complete skull.
“The
humerus, or legbone, of an extinct crocodile relative was between the jaws
of Joaquinraptor and directly in contact with the teeth,” says
Ibiricu. “This discovery is suggesting, though not proving, that the new
megaraptor may have been eating the crocodyliform [the clade that modern
crocodiles belong to] when it died.”
The
researchers are still studying the crocodile’s humerus to determine how big it
may have been, but preliminary work suggests it was large, says Ibiricu.
In addition
to recovering most of the dinosaur’s skull, the team also excavated its
vertebrae, feet, two claws, and an arm, leg and hand. The thumb claw, which is
the size of a human forearm, would have been able to tear open the soft tissue
of its prey, says Ibiricu.
Other
megaraptoran fossils have been found in Asia, Australia and elsewhere
in South America, but J. casali is the first to be found by
scientists that lived so close to the end of the Cretaceous period and, also,
one of the most complete.
The team
determined the dinosaur would have been at least 19 years old when it
died, based on the microstructure of its tibia. It also would have been about 7
metres long and weighed at least a tonne.
While Tyrannosaurus
rex would have been larger and had a bigger head, J. casali had
larger, more muscular arms, says Ibiricu. But both would probably have been the
apex predators in their respective
environments, he says.
Source:
James Woodford 2025 Dinosaur found with a crocodile in its jaws named as new species | New Scientist 23 September