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This Giant Carnivore Ran on Hooves. Scientists Are Invest...

For more than a century, paleontologists have been piecing together how the mysterious predator Andrewsarchus is related to other mammals...

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This Giant Carnivore Ran on Hooves. Scientists Are Invest...
Source: Smithsonian

What’s Happening

So get this: For more than a century, paleontologists have been piecing together how the mysterious predator Andrewsarchus is related to other mammals, like the extinct “hell pigs” and “wolves with hooves” This Giant Carnivore Ran on Hooves.

Scientists Are Investigating Its Massive Skull and Crushing Teeth to Decipher the Beasts True Nature For more than a century, paleontologists have been piecing together how the mysterious predator Andrewsarchus is related to other mammals, like the extinct “hell pigs” and “wolves with hooves” Riley Black - Science Correspondent Get our ! Based on Andrewsarchus skull size and the skull-to-body-size ratios of other hoofed predators called mesonychids, scientists estimated in 1924 that the beast was more than 12 feet long and about 6 feet tall. (plot twist fr)

Reassessments of Andrewsarchus evolutionary tree, but, suggest this estimate is inaccurate.

The Details

© Mick Ellison The beast’s head was huge. From the back to the front, its fossil skull measures more than 2.

7 feet and preserves an wild armament of piercing and crushing teeth. It looks like a skull that could belong to the wolfish, menacing Gmork from The Neverending Story —the cranium of a giant meat-eater unlike anything alive today.

Why This Matters

But what was this creature, fr? Paleontologists know it as Andrewsarchus mongoliensis , and after decades of mystery, they’re still working to piece together its true nature. The animal’s wild skull is displayed at New York City’s American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) and was found more than a century ago -pao, who was employed for a 1923 paleontology expedition to Inner Mongolia, in China.

The scientific community tends to find developments like this significant.

The Bottom Line

An accurate estimate of the creature’s size was impossible given the limited material, but if it had similar proportions to other carnivorous mammals of the time, the beast was clearly a giant. Andrewsarchus was ASAP hailed as “the largest terrestrial carnivore which has thus far been found out in any part of the world.

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