'Blood-biting' predator identified

Written By Unknown on Sunday, 27 January 2013 | 20:10

Tyrannoneustes lythrodectikosResearchers pronounced a sea predator would have been matched to feeding on large-bodied prey

Prehistoric stays detected some-more than a century ago have been identified as a new class of sea super-predator.

Researchers pronounced a 165-million-year-old quadruped was distantly associated to modern-day crocodiles.

Parts of a skeleton were found nearby Peterborough in a early 1900s and are hold during Glasgow’s Hunterian museum.

The class has been named as Tyrannoneustes lythrodectikos, definition “blood-biting oppressor swimmer”.

Scientists found that a prejudiced skeleton – including a jawbone and teeth – belonged to a organisation of crocodiles that were identical to dolphins.

The animal’s pointed, serrated teeth

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Source:
http://www.news.ezonearticle.com/2013/01/27/blood-biting-predator-identified/

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