Robert Clark/Institute Titanoboa, pictured with a ... invited paleobiologist Scott Wing, curator of fossil plants at Smithsonian’s National Museum of Natural History, to join them.
Source: Florida Museum of Natural History As the team ... the sheer size of this prehistoric giant. The discovery of Titanoboa’s fossil wasn’t just a lucky find—it was a game-changer in ...
The discovery of the Titanoboa fossil at a coal mine in Colombia, South America, has helped reveal quite a bit about the past... Titanoboa's size is a sign that the Earth was much warmer than it ...
In the wild, titanoboa probably ate large crocodiles, fish and other snakes—but if there were a titanoboa at the National Zoo today, what would the zoo keepers feed it? National Treasure ...
Vasuki indicus, a prehistoric snake fossil discovered in Gujarat, India, measures an astounding 49 feet in length, surpassing even the Titanoboa. This 47-million-year-old giant from the Eocene ...