What was the largest crocodile that ever lived?

What was the largest crocodile that ever lived?

Sarcosuchus imperator
Based on fossil evidence, the longest crocodile ever to live was a Sarcosuchus imperator, who measured 40 feet long and weighed 17,600 pounds. The largest one ever officially measured was Lolong, who was a saltwater crocodile who measured 20 feet 3 inches long and weighed 2,370 pounds.

What is a SuperCroc?

Sarcosuchus Is Also Known as the SuperCroc The name Sarcosuchus is Greek for “flesh crocodile,” but that apparently wasn’t impressive enough for the producers at National Geographic.

Where did SuperCroc live?

Sarcosuchus lived about 110 million years ago in what is now the windswept Ténéré Desert in central Niger. Sarcosuchus was the top predator in an African river, capable of eating large dinosaurs that came within range of its toothy and powerful jaws.

Can Sarcosuchus death roll?

The researchers suggest that Deinosuchus and Purussaurus could execute death rolls on, respectively, dinosaurs and large mammals. However, narrow-snouted Sarcosuchus probably could not, as the forces to its skull may have been too great.

Is Purussaurus bigger than Sarcosuchus?

One study also indicates that Purussaurus may have been heavier than either Sarcosuchus or Deinosuchus, as it had a much broader, shorter snout and this would require a thicker, stronger neck to support the larger head.

What dinosaur did alligators evolve from?

archosaurs
About 250 million years ago, the archosaurs split into two groups: a bird-like group that evolved into dinosaurs, birds, and pterosaurs, and a crocodile-like group that includes the alligators and crocs alive today and a diversity of now-extinct relatives.

What did Deinosuchus eat?

large dinosaurs
Deinosuchus was probably capable of killing and eating large dinosaurs. It may have also fed upon sea turtles, fish, and other aquatic and terrestrial prey.

Did Deinosuchus eat Trex?

So we may never know if Deinosuchus actually ate a T. rex, but the 33-foot monster with crushing jaws would probably have no problem with one. The marks its outsize teeth left on dinosaur bones was indicative of its ferocity (even though bite force was not an objective of the study).

How strong is a Deinosuchus bite?

“So if you want to see what T. Rex bite force looks like, go look at one of these crocs.” Furthermore, by Erickson’s calculations, the extinct, limousine-size Deinosuchus, or “terrible crocodile,” had an estimated bite force as high as 23,100 psi (102,750 newtons)—greater even than new estimates that put T.