Scientists discover fossils of giant sea lizard that ruled the oceans 66 million years ago

At the end of the Cretaceous period, 66 million years ago, sea monsters really existed. While dinosaurs flourished on land, the seas were ruled by the mosasaurs, giant marine reptiles.

Mosasaurs weren't dinosaurs, but enormous marine lizards growing up to 12 meters (40 feet) in length. They were distant relatives of modern iguanas and monitor lizards.

Mosasaurs looked like a Komodo dragon with flippers instead of legs, and a shark-like tail fin. Mosasaurs became larger and more specialized in the last 25 million years of the Cretaceous, taking niches once filled by marine reptiles like plesiosaurs and ichthyosaurs. Some evolved to eat small prey like fish and squid. Others crushed ammonites and clams. The new , named Thalassotitan atrox, evolved to prey on all the other marine reptiles.

The remains of the new species were dug up in Morocco, about an hour outside Casablanca. Here, near the end of the Cretaceous, the Atlantic flooded northern Africa. Nutrient rich waters upwelling from the depths fed blooms of plankton. Those fed small fish, feeding larger fish, which fed mosasaurs and plesiosaurs—and so on, with these marine reptiles becoming food for the giant, carnivorous Thalassotitan.

Thalassotitan, had an enormous skull measuring 1.4 meters (5 feet long), and grew to nearly 30 feet (9 meters) long, the size of a killer whale. While most mosasaurs had long jaws and slender teeth for catching fish, Thalassotitan had a short, wide muzzle and massive, conical teeth like those of an orca. These let it seize and rip apart huge prey. These adaptations suggest Thalassotitan was an apex predator, sitting at the top of the food chain. The giant mosasaur occupied the same ecological niche as today's and great white sharks.

Artist's representation of Thalassotitan atrox. Credit: Andrey Atuchin

Nick Longrich with the mosasaur fossil. Credit: Nick Longrich

Size comparison of Thalassotitan atrox. Credit: Nick Longrich

Map of distribution of Thalassotitan. Credit: Nick Longrich