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Project Exploration - Paleontology Education and Dinosaur Exhibits
Using the wonders of science to inspire city kids
950 East 61st Street Chicago, IL 60637 • 773.834.7614 • F.773.834.7625   
 
  Introducing Eocarcharia and Kryptops  

Eocarcharia and Kryptops
Eocarcharia and Kryptops
Illustration © T. Marshall

Eocarcharia and Kryptops lived 110 million years ago on Africa, alongside dinosaurs Nigersuarus, Suchomimus and the 40-foot-long SuperCroc. The fossils were discovered in the present-day nation of Niger in 2000 by a team led by Dr. Paul Sereno.

Map of Niger
Illustration © C. Abraczinskas and P. Sereno

Eocarcharia dinops, or “fierce-eyed dawn shark” was named for its blade-shaped teeth and prominent bony eyebrow. The teeth were designed for disabling live prey and severing body parts.  Eocarcharia and its cousins (called carcharodontosaurids) gave rise to the largest predators on southern continents, matching or exceeding Tyrannosaurus in size. Sereno and team discovered the upper jaw bone and a half- dozen other bones of the skull and teeth. They also discovered vertebrae, limb bones and claws, but until a better skeleton is discovered cannot tell for sure if they belong to Eocarcharia.

Short-snouted Kryptops palaios, or “old hidden face,” was named for the horny covering that appears to have covered nearly all of its face. At about 25 feet in length, Kryptops was a voracious meat-eater and is related to another short-toothed predator Sereno’s team discovered in Niger, Rugops. Sereno and team discovered the upper jaw bone, vertebrae and ribs, and the pelvic girdle.

Sereno and coauthor paleontologist Stephen Brusatte of Bristol University say the new fossils give us a glimpse of an earlier stage in the evolution of the bizarre meat-eaters of Gondwana, the southern landmass.  “T. rex has become such a fixture of Cretaceous lore, most people don’t realize that no tyrannosaur ever set foot on a southern continent” said Sereno.  Instead, particularly distinctive meat-eaters arose, some of which bear no resemblance to the ‘tyrant king’ beyond their taste for fresh meat.

Meet the Dinosaurs
Eocarcharia Stats
Kryptops Stats
Acta Palaeontologica Polonica
Basal abelisaurid and carcharodontosaurid theropods from
the Lower Cretaceous Elrhaz Formation of Niger

Paul C. Sereno and
Stephen L. Brusatte
(Adobe Acrobat)
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In the News
University of Chicago
Press Release
University of Bristol
Press Release
Image Gallery
News Stories
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Discovery Stories
A Titanic Finale
This final update from Camp 4 of Dinosaur Expedition 2000 describes the original discoveries
A Lost World
This summary from Dinosaur Expedition 2000 includes reference scientists' first thoughts about what they found.
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The Team
Behind the Story
The 2000
Expedition Team
Paul Sereno, paleontologist, University of Chicago, author
Stephen Brusatte, author
Todd Marshall, illustrator
Mike Hettwer, photographer
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The Animals They Lived With
African Pterosaur
Nigersaurus
Rugops
Suchomimus
SuperCroc
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Resources
The Dinosaur Expedition 2000 web site
Related Links
Recommended Reading

 
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