‘Missing Link’ to Crocodile Found
Brazilian paleontologists said today that they have found the fossil of a new species of prehistoric predator that represented a "missing link" to modern-day crocodiles.
Scientists say that the fossil is that of Montealtosuchus arrudacamposi, a medium-sized lizard-like predator measuring about 5 1/2 feet (1.7 meters) from head to tail. It is believed that this fossil dates back about 80 million years to the Late Cretaceous period.
"This is scientifically important because the specimen literally is the link between more primitive crocodiles that lived in the era of the dinosaurs 80-85 million years ago and modern species," paleontologist Ismar de Souza Carvalho of Rio de Janeiro Federal University told Reuters.
Montealtosuchus arrudacamposi, an agile terrestrial predator of the Peirosauridae family, had different habits from today’s crocodiles but it was similar in form and structure despite having longer limbs, scientists added.
Reuters reports that this new species is one of a number of important finds by paleontologists in Brazil and Argentina over the past few years. The fossil was discovered near the town of Monte Alto in Sao Paulo state, and is named after the place and the local scientist who dug up the fossil in 2004, Arruda Campos.
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