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What Titanoboa Tells Us About a Hotter, Wilder EarthImagine walking through a steamy, ancient rainforest. The air is thick with humidity, the trees tower above, and somewhere ...
In 2009, the discovery of Titanoboa cerrejonensis fossils in Colombia's Cerrejón coal mine revealed a massive snake that ...
Scientists working in Colombia have discovered the largest snake on the planet, an animal that blows away previous records.
Most boas, which are a type of large, non-venomous constricting snake, prefer a diet of mammals, birds or reptiles. But ...
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Sciencing on MSNWhat If Titanoboa Never Went Extinct?The Titanoboa went extinct around 50 million years ago, but what might life be like now if this gargantuan beast still roamed ...
As a part of their documentary, the Smithsonian Channel asked sculptor Kevin Hockley to create a full-size replica of Titanoboa. Robert Clark/Institute Titanoboa, pictured with a dyrosaur and a ...
At one point, Titanoboa was the largest known predator on the planet, the museum explains, and likely weighed at least one ...
The prehistoric snake Titanoboa certainly lived up to its 'titan' name when it roamed the Earth 58 million years ago. It was 14 metres long, weighed more than a tonne and could swallow a crocodile ...
It's the ultimate battle of the predators - the monster snake's unbelievable power against the tyrannosaurus' giant bite. They lived in different times and places, but if they ever met, who would ...
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