Sergei Leshchinsky, Head of the Laboratory of Continental Ecosystems of the Mesozoic and Cenozoic Tomsk state university

For me now the most interesting topic- extinction problem mammoth fauna. At the end of the 19th century, two main hypotheses were formed - climatic and anthropogenic. These two versions survived until the end of the 20th century almost unchanged. I have been digging up the remains of mammoths for twenty-five years. In the process of such long-term research, I came up with my own concept - geochemical, based on tectonic changes. Vertical movements earth's crust and climate humidification have affected the geochemistry of landscapes that were generally alkaline and became mostly acidic 10,000 years ago. According to my hypothesis, mammoths were unable to adapt to the changed (more acidic) soil characteristics, drinking water and related food resources. Paleontologically, this is proved by a sharp increase in the proportion of pathological changes in bones and teeth.

I have always been interested in science at the intersection of disciplines, broad topics, big problems. When I finished school, I thought where to go next - in paleontology, geology or archeology, and now I do all this at once. I study ancient ecosystems, and they include environment and the organisms that existed at that time, the climate and geological setting. Paleontology is, in fact, a synthesis of biology, geology, geography. Now science has reached a level where both living and inanimate nature- the whole system.

The longer you work, the more you realize how much is unclear around.

Now my hypothesis has more and more supporters, and it has spurred the development of old ideas. For example, the Americans and the Dutch are resurrecting the comet fall hypothesis, explaining that this caused massive fires and formed a large number of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, which as a result led to the oxidation of landscapes. I explain this oxidation earthly reasons- tectonics and climate humidification.

For dinosaurs, we have much less data and finds. Mammoths lived by geological standards relatively recently - less than ten thousand years ago, and dinosaurs - more than sixty million years ago. There is no longer any organic matter left of them, only fossils. But it is possible that geochemical factors contributed to the extinction of the dinosaurs.

Our group from TSU has discovered most of the locations of dinosaur fauna in Russia. Until 1995, only four locations were known in our country, and now there are already twenty. A new dinosaur region in the Kemchug basin between Achinsk and Krasnoyarsk - our findings.

But much more actively we dig mammoth fauna. There is a very large location in the Kargat region Novosibirsk region- Wolf's mane. It for a long time remained understudied. We returned to it twenty years after the discovery with new data and knowledge - now this is the coolest location of the mammoth fauna in Asia. There is the highest concentration of fossil remains - in some places more than 130 finds on square meter. There's less rock than bones!

Every season there are several field stories that then turn into stories. Here's a story about folk wisdom. Digging, a man drives up on a tractor. “What,” he says, “are you digging?” Looking for Dinosaurs. He thought and gave out: "You have an interesting job, you are looking for something that you have not lost."

Paleontologists are often considered eccentrics. The profession is unusual, in Russia people generally do not understand what paleontologists do. When you come somewhere with excavations, everyone is sure that archaeologists, since we are digging. We have long been accustomed to, even agree to archaeologists.

However, in our country you cannot distinguish a paleontologist or a geologist from a mushroom picker or a fisherman - they all go in one. But abroad, paleontologists look different, and the format of field work is different. Once in America, I saw a really classic cinematic character of a paleontologist-geologist - big shoes, shorts, a hammer, a mustache, a hat, glasses, and small in stature.

Children are always very interested in our work. This is good, because paleontology is an extremely important science, it is of great practical importance, for example, in the study of oil and gas fields, since paleontological remains allow us to determine the age rocks. Almost every year, a lot of new species of plants and animals are discovered that no one knew about before. And of course, we have a romantic profession. You discover the past of the land you walk on, you know the origins, you see what no one has seen before you.

How toothy birds grew

Pavel Skuchas, Associate Professor, Department of Vertebrate Zoology, St. Petersburg State University

There are two questions that I would like to find an answer to. The first question is about the origin of this or that group of beings. For example, when we learned that modern birds are descendants of carnivorous dinosaurs, it was a breakthrough. But there are still many blank spots. With regard to modern frogs and salamanders, there is still debate about which group of ancient amphibians they descended from. I want to understand this. The second question is the evolution of dinosaurs. I would like to restore the whole picture of the Mesozoic - how the dinosaurs changed, how they disappeared.

I decided to become a paleontologist at the age of five. Children are always interested in the unusual, and here are the dinosaurs! It seems to me that people who retain this childish interest go into paleontology, they want to discover something new. It has not weakened for me, now my area is dinosaurs and ancient amphibians.

I also research how ancient vertebrates grew. learning it specific method, similar to the study of growth rings of trees - a thin cut of the bone of the fossil is made and the cut line is studied by analogy with growth rings. You can trace the lines of stopping growth, in winter growth slows down, then resumes. Amphibians, reptiles, and some mammals have such rings. It is one thing to find and describe a skeleton, quite another to understand how an animal has grown and developed throughout its life.

The end product of a paleontologist's work is a scientific article. After all, if a paleontologist has found a dinosaur, then this is not yet paleontology, but collecting. Research can be carried out on the basis of the results of your own expeditions, or you can go to museums, look at collections, and find something new. I go on expeditions and to museums. It is difficult to look for something new on the territory of Russia, everything is overgrown with taiga, there are no deserts. So, unfortunately, there are also unsuccessful expeditions.

“Deaf taiga, the rangers-guides left us, twisted their fingers at the temple and said: “Two people went to the taiga, one will return.” We worked for three days, hardly slept. On the third evening, a boat comes along the river with men shooting at someone on our bank. And after five minutes, some aggressive beast begins to walk around the camp.

A field paleontologist lives two lives - on expeditions and in the laboratory. An expedition is a small life, sometimes you work in a remote taiga, a desert, but there are expeditions when you have to work in an active quarry, you knead the dirt around BelAZ, there is no romance in this. When you find something, this is the first delight. When you begin to study the discovery, you experience the delight of discovery. And the final touch is the finished article. That is, our work gives very different sensations: the romance of the expedition, the joy of laboratory discoveries, the satisfaction after the publication of the article.

Looking at the same paleontologist in the field and at a conference, you may not recognize him. The field version is a big beard, boots, an ax, a shovel; in the non-field season, these are intelligent people in jackets. And the eccentricity, probably, remains inside, this is just the same childish curiosity that they managed to save.

Often in the fields there are situations that border on idiocy. In 2015, I, along with one student, went on reconnaissance to the Lower Tunguska, not understanding the terrain. It turned out that there are a lot of unkind bears. And now - the deaf taiga, the rangers-guides left us, twisted their fingers at the temple and said: "Two people went to the taiga, one will return." We worked for three days, burned fires, hardly slept. Suddenly, on the third day in the evening, a boat with peasants passes by us on the river, they fire four shots at someone on our bank and drive on. Five minutes later, some aggressive beast begins to walk around our small camp. We had a rubber boat, we quickly plunged into it and sailed 38 kilometers to the nearest winter hut. An indescribable feeling when you are together on a small rubber boat scratching along the river, running away from a bear, and snowy owls are flying around, like in Harry Potter! They don’t pick up phones there, so upon arrival at the winter quarters, I had to “write a Tunguska SMS” - go to the bank of the river, where a boat with fishermen or hunters goes about once a day, and send them a note asking them to contact our rangers so that they come and pick up us. A day later, the huntsmen arrived, and we were able to finish the job under guard with carbines. The most dangerous thing in expeditions is novice scientists and people who are sure that they already know and can do everything.

What microbes know about dinosaurs

Anastasia Gulina, senior Researcher Laboratory of Mesozoic and Cenozoic Continental Ecosystems, Tomsk State University

In the expedition, everyone works for the same goal, but everyone has their own area of ​​​​responsibility. We clean up the sections to the level where the finds lie, study the geology of this place and select rock samples. Under laboratory conditions, we isolate the organic component from the organo-mineral fraction and obtain a concentrate, which we study under a microscope - for example, I specialize in spores and pollen. This is called micropaleontology. The microcosm is no less interesting than the bones of mammoths and dinosaurs: it stores a lot of information about the living conditions of this megafauna.

As geologists like to say, it so happened historically that I came to paleontology. I studied at the Faculty of Geology and went to my first geological practice with Sergey Leshchinsky, where we were lucky to dig up mammoths and wash bones and teeth small mammals, crocodiles, dinosaurs. After practice, he invited me to join his paleontological detachment - since then I have been here. And recently, my mother was sorting through old books and remembered that in childhood my favorite book was “Kids about Minerals”. And I realized that my hobbies come from childhood.

I love the field work very much and I hate to hang around in the city in the summer. I like that we do not have a routine, not monotonous work - every day we learn something new, we are not tied to a strict schedule ... The most important thing is the task and the result. On an expedition, you feel like you belong to yourself.

Each expedition is associated with funny stories. Once we rafted down the Demyanka River for several weeks, it was hot, and for a hundred kilometers not a single locality... The guys wanted beer - of course, we do not take it on the expedition, and there is nowhere to buy it. We laid out in pieces tree bark on the sand "I want beer" and waved to passing barges. Usually we were just buzzed, but from one barge they offered vodka.

And once we camped on a channel of the Chulym River. My friend and I were on duty. We did all the household chores and decided to take a walk in a kayak. Half an hour later we returned to the camp, everything is upside down there! And from our headquarters tent sticks out ... a cow's tail. We drove the cows away and started cleaning. At some point, we looked at the cauldrons and realized that the cows had safely eaten the rest of the salad. And in gratitude, they licked the cauldron to a shine.

It's funny when you go on a reconnaissance route through a dense forest and stumble, for example, on a bed standing there. Once we met a sofa in the forest, covered from the rain with polyethylene. Who needed a sofa in the woods, and why didn't this man come back for it?

“The guys wanted beer, - of course, we don’t take it on an expedition. We laid out “I want beer” with pieces of tree bark on the sand and waved to the passing barges. Usually they just buzzed us, but from one barge they offered vodka. ”

Our areas of interest are not limited to paleontology. What we just do not talk about in the expedition! We work at the excavation, and in the camp we play Board games, sing songs with a guitar, argue about anything. Paleontology is not only male profession: micropaleontology is mostly done by women, and there are many women in geology.

When we arrive at a new place, the people living there have a lot of interest in our work. But yes, we are always called archaeologists. And they often ask the question: “Are you looking for gold?”

Why don't crocodiles fly?

Alexander Averyanov, Professor of the Department of Sedimentary Geology, St. Petersburg State University, Head of the Theriology Laboratory, Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences

Of the bones that I have personally found, the most important find is part of the skull of a duck-billed dinosaur. But I'm not much of a field worker. I prefer to sit in my office and describe the bones. Fortunately, my younger colleagues are now doing much more efficient field work than under my personal supervision. I myself often got into some kind of story. For example, I came to Buryatia at Goose Lake with a new tent. In the evening a hurricane began, and I managed to put it up with great difficulty. By morning, shreds of matter remained from it, scattered within a radius of several kilometers across the steppe, and broken iron bars. The rest of the expedition I lived in a food tent. But it was very funny.

I have always been interested in the past. Without the past, it is impossible to understand the present and predict the future. Actually, the past is the most reliable thing we have. The present is a shaky, unstable film between the past and the future. The future is uncertain and therefore scary. How to understand why giraffes live in Africa, but crocodiles do not fly? These and many other questions can only be answered by the history of life on our planet. It is unique and will not be repeated anywhere else, even if life arises again or has already arisen somewhere. Science fiction writers populate other planets with anthropomorphic aliens, trees, and near-terrestrial animals. How incredible this is can be understood by studying the history of life on Earth.

IN school years I was most interested in genetics and paleontology. I went to the circle of genetics and to the small geological faculty. Then I realized: in order to study paleontology, you can’t go to the Faculty of Geology, since paleontology is biological science. As a result, he entered the biological faculty of Leningrad University. After the third course on advice supervisor I went to the Zoological Institute of the Academy of Sciences of the USSR. Here I work to this day, and part-time - at the universities of St. Petersburg, Tomsk and Guangzhou.

Paleontologists are little different from other people. Of course, sometimes ordinary people perceive scientists as eccentrics, because they do not understand what they are doing. From the point of view of such a layman life success determined by accumulated material wealth. And for scientists, the meaning of life lies in knowledge, and they look at these inhabitants as unfortunate people who live their lives mediocrely.

What gives me the greatest joy is learning new things. First, you learn for yourself what is already known to science - this is a learning process. Then you understand what no one knew before you - and you contribute to scientific progress. No more joy than to understand that the bone in your hands belongs to an unknown animal and you were the first to know about its existence.

There is nothing wrong with living in the past. For example, I do not want to live in a future where there will be no forests and large animals and the whole planet will be in glass and concrete.

News from the Jurassic period

What We Learned About Dinosaurs in the 21st Century

Not all dinosaurs are extinct

Modern classification allows you to resurrect dinosaurs. Biologists divide the ancient lizards into two groups - ornithischian and lizard. Contrary to the name, it was the lizards (their typical representative T-Rex) who became the ancestors modern birds. It is impossible to clearly distinguish between birds and dinosaurs on the evolutionary tree, birds may well be considered a variety of dinosaurs. Not all monsters died out 65 million years ago, and when you throw crumbs to pigeons in the park, remember that you are feeding real dinosaurs!

Feathered revolution

In 1996, Chinese paleontologist Ji Qiang discovered the remains of a small and very unusual dinosaur: shales preserved imprints of feathers that surrounded the skeleton in the form of a halo. Thus began the "feathered revolution" - since then, paleontologists have found dozens of other feathered dinosaurs: predators and herbivores, small and large, flying and terrestrial. In 2012, paleontologists even managed to find a feathered tyrannosaurus rex. The high preservation of his remains made it possible to restore the structure of the feathers: they looked more like fluff needed for heating, and not like flight feathers of birds. Don't believe the old drawings - dinosaurs were furry!

Not so cold blooded

Since the end of the 20th century, paleontologists began to suspect dinosaurs of warm-bloodedness. This was indicated by the large blood vessels in the bones and their need for a high metabolism, as in modern mammals and birds. Because fossil bones have tree-like growth rings, in 2014 scientists were able to determine the type of metabolism from the structure and growth rate of dinosaur bones. It turned out that the ancient lizards occupied an intermediate position of "mesotherms", that is, the blood in their veins flowed neither cold nor warm. Like warm-blooded animals, they could generate their own heat, but they could not maintain a constant body temperature. 8 mesothermic species still exist today: some species of sharks, turtles, tuna and the Australian echidna.

pregnant dinosaur

In February of this year, the first evidence was found in China that some dinosaurs may have been viviparous rather than oviparous. In the fossils of a female dinocephalosaurus, traces of cervical vertebrae and smaller forelimbs were found in the belly area. The fact that this is an embryo, and not the last supper of a predator, was proved by belonging to the same species, the absence of a fossilized shell, the size and position of the body of a smaller individual. The aquatic predatory reptile has adapted to live birth due to anatomical features: long neck and blade-like limbs did not allow beautiful ladies to build nests and lay eggs on land.

Not only the meteorite is to blame

Often the disappearance of dinosaurs is explained by "catastrophic" hypotheses, the most popular of which is the fall of the Chicxulub meteorite, which left behind a crater 180 km in diameter at the bottom of the Gulf of Mexico. But in 2016, it was shown that the extinction began long before the asteroid hit, and the gradual "decline of the lizards" lasted at least 40 million years. Probably, the dinosaurs were already suffering from some kind of processes, and the meteorite just finished off the poor fellows. In addition, the catastrophe was not as terrible as it is described: if the atmosphere of the planet were really filled with vapors of sulfuric acid that reflected light, darkness would come and photosynthesis would stop, the temperature would drop and water would flow. acid rain- it would not be good for everyone. So this scenario does not explain the survival of crocodiles, mammals and birds. The investigation into the mysterious death of dinosaurs continues ...

big-eyed lizard

In Jurassic Park, the characters tried to escape the T-Rex by relying on its hideous vision: “Don't move! He won't see us if we don't move." In fact, the narrow skull and tennis-ball-sized eyes provided the T-Rex with an excellent sense of depth, greater than a hawk's visual range and 13 times the clarity of human vision. In addition, a year ago, geneticists from University of Cambridge found evidence that dinosaurs had color vision. The researchers believe that they could distinguish red shades thanks to a gene for the synthesis of red pigment in the retina, the same is in birds and turtles.

Well, where are your hands

In the Chrome browser, when it is impossible to connect to the Internet, a funny icon appears: a tyrannosaurus rex, which with its short legs cannot “reach” the globe, the symbol of the global network. However, the useless "handles" of the Tyrannosaurus rex are another myth. According to recent studies, one left (or right) T-Rex could lift up to 200 kilograms. In addition, paleontologists have found cracks in the bones of the forelimbs, which indicates their active use. Most likely, tyrannosaurs used their forepaws in fighting and hunting other dinosaurs.

The biggest dinosaur

On August 9, an article was published in which Argentine paleontologists described the largest land animal that ever lived on the planet. Representatives of the new species Patagotitan mayorum from the genus of titanosaurs reached 37 meters in length, 15 meters in height and weighed about 69 tons. They lived 100 million years ago.

Russian dinosaurs

The most famous and interesting finds

PERM REGION

Here they found small archosaurs, the ancestors of dinosaurs, as well as animal-like lizards that gave rise to mammals, and cheeky lizards, vaguely similar to huge turtles without a shell.

LOWER VOLGA REGION

Complete skeletons of Elasmosaurus, a giant water dinosaur, have not yet been found in our country, however, in the Lower Volga region, accumulations of individual bones of this reptile were discovered.

PENZA REGION

Not far from the city of Penza, in the 1920s, the skull of one of the largest specimens of Hoffman's Mosasaurus was found. The dinosaur that lived in the sea reached 17 meters in length, and 10% of the body length was a powerful jaw.

ORENBURG REGION

In the Orenburg region, unusually large fragments of the bones of a plesiosaur, the largest predator in the history of the Earth, were found. The length of his body approached 20 m.

CHUVASHIA

Abyssosaurus nataliae lived here - a seven-meter giant with a very long neck, a kind of "water giraffe". Abyssosaurus in translation - "lizard from the abyss"; judging by the structure of the bones, he lived deep under water.

KUNDUR LOCATION

(Arkharinsk district of the Amur region)

In the late 1990s, the tail of a hadrosaur was found in construction trenches, followed by the entire skeleton. The lizard, named Olorotitan arharensis, turned out to be one of the last dinosaurs to live on Earth.

LOCATION COAKANOUT

(Anadyrsky district of the Chukotka Autonomous Okrug)

The bank of the Kakanaut River in the Koryak Highlands is the northernmost point where traces of dinosaurs have been found. Eggshells of hadrosaurs and theropods have been found here.

NIKOLSKOYE LOCATION

(Sharypovsky district of the Krasnoyarsk Territory)

Near the city of Sharypova in 2000 was discovered new class dinosaurs of the titanosaurid family. Among the new animals discovered here, predatory dinosaur Kileskus aristotocus is the ancestor of Tyrannosaurus rex.

ULYANOVSK REGION

On the banks of the Volga, scientists discovered the remains of a new species of pliosaurus, which was named Makhaira rossica. Pliosaurs were large sea lizards up to 9 meters in length. The “Volga pliosaurus” was smaller (up to 5 meters), but judging by the structure of the teeth, it could hunt big booty not only in water, like others, but also on land.

BLAGOVESCHENSKY DISTRICT

One of the most famous "Russian dinosaurs", Ryabinin's Amurosaurus, was discovered at the beginning of the 20th century. The lizard belonged to the family of duck-billed dinosaurs and had a hollow crest on its head, presumably used for visual and vocal communication with fellow dinosaurs.

Dinosaurs were the dominant vertebrates that inhabited every ecosystem on planet Earth for over 160 million years - from Triassic period(about 230 million years ago) to the end Cretaceous(about 65 million years ago). I want to acquaint you with a list of the ten most ferocious marine dinosaurs.

10 Shastasaurus

Shastasaurus (Shastasaurus) - a genus of dinosaurs that lived at the end of the Triassic period (more than 200 million years ago) in the territory of modern North America and possibly China. His remains were found in California, British Columbia and the Chinese province of Guizhou. This predator is the largest marine reptile ever found on the planet. It could grow up to 21 meters in length and weigh 20 tons.

9 Dacosaurus

In ninth place in the ranking is the Dakosaurus - saltwater crocodile, who lived in the late Jurassic - early Cretaceous period (more than 100.5 million years ago). It was a fairly large, carnivorous animal, adapted almost exclusively to hunting large prey. Can grow up to 6 meters in length.

8. Thalassomedon

Thalassomedon is a genus of dinosaurs that lived in North America about 95 million years ago. Most likely, it was the main predator of its time. Thalassomedon grew up to 12.3 m in length. The size of its flippers reached about 1.5–2 meters. The length of the skull was 47 centimeters, teeth - 5 cm. He ate fish.

7. Nothosaurus

Nothosaurus (Nothosaurus) - a marine lizard that lived 240-210 million years ago in the territory modern Russia, Israel, China and North Africa. In length reached about 4 meters. It had webbed limbs, with five long fingers that could be used both for movement on land and for swimming. Probably ate fish. A complete Nothosaurus skeleton can be seen at the Natural History Museum in Berlin.

6. Tylosaurus

In sixth place in the list of the most ferocious marine dinosaurs is Tylosaurus (Tylosaurus) - a large marine predatory lizard that inhabited the oceans at the end of the Cretaceous period (about 88-78 million years ago). was dominant marine predator of his time. It grew up to 14 m in length. It fed on fish, large predatory sharks, small mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, and waterfowl.

5. Talattoarchon

Talattoarchon (Thalattoarchon) - a large marine reptile that lived more than 245 million years ago in what is now the western part of the United States. The remains, consisting of part of the skull, spine, pelvic bones, and part of the hind fins, were discovered in Nevada in 2010. According to estimates, talattoarchon was the superpredator of his time. It grew to at least 8.6 m in length.

4. Tanystropheus

Tanystropheus is a genus of lizard-like reptiles that lived in the Middle Triassic about 230 million years ago. It grew up to 6 meters in length, and was distinguished by a very elongated and mobile neck, which reached 3.5 m. It led a predatory aquatic or semi-aquatic lifestyle, probably hunting fish and cephalopods near the coast.

3. Liopleurodon

Liopleurodon (Liopleurodon) - a genus of large carnivorous marine reptiles that lived at the turn of the middle and late jurassic(about 165 million to 155 million years ago). It is assumed that the largest known Liopleurodon was just over 10 m in length, but typical sizes for it range from 5 to 7 m (according to other sources, 16-20 meters). Body weight is estimated at 1-1.7 tons. These apex predators probably ambushed large cephalopods, ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs, sharks, and other large animals they could catch.

2 Mosasaurus

Mosasaurus (Mosasaurus) - a genus of extinct reptiles that lived on the territory of modern Western Europe and North America during the Late Cretaceous - 70–65 million years ago. For the first time their remains were found in 1764 near the river Meuse. The total length of representatives of this genus ranged from 10 to 17.5 m. appearance resembled a mixture of fish (or whale) with a crocodile. All the time they were in the water, plunging to a considerable depth. They ate fish, cephalopods, turtles and ammonites. According to some scientists, these predators are distant relatives modern monitor lizards and iguanas.

1. Megalodon

Megalodon (Carcharocles megalodon) - an extinct species prehistoric shark, who lived everywhere in the oceans 28.1-3 million years ago. Is the largest known predatory fish in history. It is estimated that the megalodon reached 18 meters in length and weighed 60 tons. The shape of the body and behavior was similar to the modern white shark. He hunted cetaceans and other large marine animals. Interestingly, some cryptozoologists claim that this animal could have survived to the present, but apart from the huge teeth found (up to 15 cm in length), there is no other evidence that the shark still lives somewhere in the ocean.

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10. Shastasaurus(Shastasaurus)

Ichthyosaurs were marine predators that looked like modern dolphins and could grow to enormous sizes and lived during the Triassic period about 200 million years ago.
Shastasaurus, largest species The most marine reptile ever found was an ichthyosaur that could grow to over 20 meters. It was much longer than most other predators. But one of the largest creatures ever to swim in the sea wasn't exactly a fearsome predator; Shastasaurus fed by suction, and ate mainly fish.

9. dacosaurus(Dakosaurus)

Dacosaurus was first discovered in Germany, and with its strangely reptilian yet fish-like body, it was one of the main predators in the sea during the Jurassic.
Its fossils have been found over a very wide area - they have been found everywhere, from England to Russia to Argentina. Although it is usually compared to modern crocodiles, Dacosaurus could reach 5 meters in length. Its unique teeth have led scientists to believe that it was the top predator during its terrible reign.

8. Thalassomedon(Thalassomedon)

Thalassomedon belonged to the Pliosaur group, and its name is translated from Greek as "Sea Lord" - and for good reason. Thalassomedons were huge predators, reaching up to 12 meters in length.
He had almost 2 meter flippers, which allowed him to swim in the depths with deadly efficiency. Its reign as a predator continued until the late Cretaceous, until it finally came to an end when new larger predators such as Mosasaurus appeared in the sea.

7. nothosaurus(Nothosaurus)

Nothosaurs, reaching a length of only 4 meters, were aggressive predators. They were armed mouthful sharp, outwardly pointing teeth, indicating that their diet consisted of squid and fish. It is believed that Nothosaurs were primarily ambush predators. They used their sleek, reptilian physique to sneak up on their prey and surprise them when they attacked.
It is believed that Nothosaurs were related to Pliosaurs, another type of deep sea predator. Fossil evidence suggests that they lived during the Triassic period about 200 million years ago.

6. Tylosaurus(Tylosaurus)

Tylosaurus belonged to the Mosasaurus species. It was enormous in size, reaching over 15 meters in length.
Tylosaurus was a meat eater with a very varied diet. Traces of fish, sharks, smaller mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, and even some flightless birds. They lived at the end of the Cretaceous in the sea that covered what is now North America, where they densely nestled at the top of the marine food chain for several million years.

5. Talattoarchon(Thalattoarchon Saurophagis)

Only recently discovered, Talattoarchon was the size of a school bus, reaching almost 9 meters in length. This early view an ichthyosaur that lived during the Triassic period, 244 million years ago. Because they appeared shortly after the Permian extinction (the largest mass extinction on Earth, when scientists believe 95% of marine life was wiped out), his discovery gives scientists a new way to look at the rapid recovery of the ecosystem.

4. tanystropheus(Tanystropheus)

Although Tanystropheus was not strictly marine life, his diet consisted mainly of fish, and scientists believe that he spent most of his time in the water. Tanystropheus was a reptile that could reach 6 meters in length and is believed to have lived during the Triassic period about 215 million years ago.

3. Liopleurodon(Liopleurodon)

Liopleurodon was a marine reptile and reached over 6 meters in length. It mainly lived in the seas that covered Europe during the Jurassic period and was one of the best predators of its time. Some of his jaws are believed to have reached more than 3 meters - this is approximately equal to the distance from floor to ceiling.
With such huge teeth, it is not difficult to understand why Liopleurodon dominated the food chain.

2. Mosasaurus(Mosasaurus)

If Liopleurodon was huge, then Mosasaurus was colossal.
Fossil evidence suggests that Mosasaurus could reach up to 15 meters in length, making it one of the largest marine predators of the Cretaceous period. The head of the Mosasaurus was similar to that of a crocodile, armed with hundreds of razor-sharp teeth that could kill even the most well-armored foes.

1. Megalodon(Megalodon)

One of the most large predators V maritime history and one of the largest sharks ever recorded, Megalodons were incredibly scary creatures.
Megalodons prowled the depths of the oceans for cenozoic era, 28 - 1.5 million years ago, and were a much larger version of the great white shark, the most feared and strong predator in the oceans today. But while the maximum length modern great white sharks can reach is 6 meters, Megalodons could grow up to 20 meters in length, which means they were bigger than a school bus!

Any person imagines a dinosaur in the form of a ferocious lizard of terrifying size, baring its huge mouth and destroying everything in its path. Indeed, most of the ancient reptiles had a gigantic size that boggles the imagination. This is evidenced by numerous finds of individual fragments and even entire skeletons of fossil pangolins. However, not all dinosaurs were giants; among them there were certain types, which nature, as if in mockery, endowed with the growth of a chicken. These tiny creatures darted in numerous flocks among the thickets of relic fern, trying not to get under the feet of their huge relatives and looking for even smaller prey.

Why, until recently, scientists knew so little about these amazing crumbs? It was their small stature that played a cruel joke on them. The bones of these dinosaurs were so light and fragile that they did not stand the test of time and practically did not survive to this day. Only a few finds allowed these small reptiles to make themselves known.

This lizard has gained fame small predator Jurassic period. Its length did not exceed a meter, and its weight reached only two kilograms. He moved on fast hind legs, had a long tail and a movable head. The nimble dinosaur hunted insects and lizards. In total, three Compsognathus skeletons were found. Two of them were found on the territory of Europe in the middle of the nineteenth and at the end of the twentieth century, and one skeleton was preserved in Russia and was found quite recently, in 2010. Thanks to these findings, scientists were able to restore the appearance and habits of the fossil dinosaur.

Nkvebasaurus
The only fragment of the skeleton of this pangolin was found in 2000 in Africa, near the Sahara desert. Most likely the remains belonged to the cub. The structural features of these lizards include the presence of long fingers, which made it possible to capture prey. The so-called stomach stones, which are usually intended for grinding plant foods, have been preserved in the intestines. This allowed scientists to conclude that the nquebasaurs are omnivores. In length, the dinosaur did not exceed a meter and was a contemporary of Compsognathus.

Scipionyx
The perfectly preserved skeleton of this pangolin was found in Italy at the end of the twentieth century. The skeleton that belonged to a baby dinosaur pleased scientists with an extensive base for research, because the fossilized remains preserved the structure of not only the soft tissues of the animal, but also its internal organs. Most likely, the body of the lizard was covered with primitive feathers. He moved on his hind legs, supporting his body with the help of his tail. The size of adults, according to scientists, reached two meters. The dinosaur lived in the Cretaceous period and was a predator. In any case, scientists found lizards and fish among the undigested food residues.

In previous publications, we have already touched on the topic of dinosaurs. Then it was about the ten largest species known to science. Today we want to acquaint you with a list of the ten most ferocious marine dinosaurs. So.

Shastasaurus (Shastasaurus) - a genus of dinosaurs that lived at the end of the Triassic period (more than 200 million years ago) in the territory of modern North America and, possibly, China. His remains have been found in California, British Columbia and the Chinese province of Guizhou. This predator is the largest marine reptile ever found on the planet. It could grow up to 21 meters in length and weigh 20 tons.


In ninth place in the ranking is Dakosaurus, a marine crocodile that lived in the late Jurassic - early Cretaceous period (more than 100.5 million years ago). It was a fairly large, carnivorous animal, adapted almost exclusively to hunting large prey. Can grow up to 6 meters in length.


Thalassomedon is a genus of dinosaurs that lived in North America about 95 million years ago. Most likely, it was the main predator of its time. Thalassomedon grew up to 12.3 m in length. The size of its flippers reached about 1.5–2 meters. The length of the skull was 47 centimeters, teeth - 5 cm. He ate fish.


Nothosaurus (Nothosaurus) is a marine lizard that lived 240-210 million years ago in the territory of modern Russia, Israel, China and North Africa. In length reached about 4 meters. It had webbed limbs, with five long fingers that could be used both for movement on land and for swimming. Probably ate fish. A complete Nothosaurus skeleton can be seen at the Natural History Museum in Berlin.


In sixth place in the list of the most ferocious marine dinosaurs is Tylosaurus (Tylosaurus) - a large marine predatory lizard that inhabited the oceans at the end of the Cretaceous period (about 88-78 million years ago). It was the dominant marine predator of its time. It grew up to 14 m in length. It fed on fish, large predatory sharks, small mosasaurs, plesiosaurs, and waterfowl.


Talattoarchon (Thalattoarchon) - a large marine reptile that lived more than 245 million years ago in what is now the western part of the United States. The remains, consisting of part of the skull, spine, pelvic bones, and part of the hind fins, were discovered in Nevada in 2010. According to estimates, talattoarchon was the superpredator of his time. It grew to at least 8.6 m in length.


Tanystropheus is a genus of lizard-like reptiles that lived in the Middle Triassic about 230 million years ago. It grew up to 6 meters in length, and was distinguished by a very elongated and mobile neck, which reached 3.5 m. It led a predatory aquatic or semi-aquatic lifestyle, probably hunting fish and cephalopods near the coast.


Liopleurodon (Liopleurodon) - a genus of large carnivorous marine reptiles that lived at the turn of the middle and late Jurassic period (from about 165 million to 155 million years ago). It is assumed that the largest known Liopleurodon was just over 10 m in length, but typical sizes for it range from 5 to 7 m (according to other sources, 16-20 meters). Body weight is estimated at 1-1.7 tons. These apex predators probably ambushed large cephalopods, ichthyosaurs, plesiosaurs, sharks, and other large animals they could catch.


Mosasaurus (Mosasaurus) is a genus of extinct reptiles that lived on the territory of modern Western Europe and North America during the Late Cretaceous - 70-65 million years ago. For the first time their remains were found in 1764 near the river Meuse. The total length of representatives of this genus ranged from 10 to 17.5 m. In appearance, they resembled a mixture of a fish (or a whale) with a crocodile. All the time they were in the water, plunging to a considerable depth. They ate fish, cephalopods, turtles and ammonites. According to some scientists, these predators are distant relatives of modern monitor lizards and iguanas.


Megalodon (Carcharocles megalodon) is an extinct species of prehistoric shark that lived throughout the oceans 28.1–3 million years ago. It is the largest known predatory fish in history. It is estimated that the megalodon reached 18 meters in length and weighed 60 tons. In body shape and behavior, it was similar to the modern white shark. He hunted cetaceans and other large marine animals. Interestingly, some cryptozoologists claim that this animal could have survived to the present, but apart from the huge teeth found (up to 15 cm in length), there is no other evidence that the shark still lives somewhere in the ocean.