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An ancient ‘terror crocodile' became a dinosaur-eating giant. Scientists say they now know why

An ancient ‘terror crocodile' became a dinosaur-eating giant. Scientists say they now know why

CNN23-04-2025

(CNN) — A massive, extinct reptile that once snacked on dinosaurs had a broad snout like an alligator's, but it owed its success to a trait that modern alligators lack: tolerance for salt water.
Deinosuchus was one of the largest crocodilians that ever lived, with a body nearly as long as a bus and teeth the size of bananas. From about 82 million to 75 million years ago, the top predator swam in rivers and estuaries of North America. The skull was wide and long, tipped with a bulbous lump that was unlike any skull structure seen in other crocodilians. Toothmarks on Cretaceous bones hint that Deinosuchus hunted or scavenged dinosaurs.
Despite its scientific name, which translates as 'terror crocodile,' Deinosuchus has commonly been called a 'greater alligator,' and prior assessments of its evolutionary relationships grouped it with alligators and their ancient relatives. However, a new analysis of fossils, along with DNA from living crocodilians such as alligators and crocodiles, suggests Deinosuchus belongs on a different part of the crocodilian family tree.
Unlike alligatoroids, Deinosuchus retained the salt glands of ancestral crocodilians, enabling it to tolerate salt water, scientists reported Wednesday in the journal Communications Biology. Modern crocodiles have these glands, which collect and release excess sodium chloride.
Salt tolerance would have helped Deinosuchus navigate the Western Interior Seaway that once divided North America, during a greenhouse phase marked by global sea level rise. Deinosuchus could then have spread across the continent to inhabit coastal marshes on both sides of the ancient inland sea, and along North America's Atlantic coast.
The new study's revised family tree for crocodilians offers fresh insights into climate resilience in the group, and hints at how some species adapted to environmental cooling while others went extinct.
With salt glands allowing Deinosuchus to travel where its alligatoroid cousins couldn't, the terror crocodile settled in habitats teeming with large prey. Deinosuchus evolved to become an enormous and widespread predator that dominated marshy ecosystems, where it fed on pretty much whatever it wanted.
'No one was safe in these wetlands when Deinosuchus was around,' said senior study author Dr. Márton Rabi, a lecturer in the Institute of Geosciences at the University of Tübingen in Germany. 'We are talking about an absolutely monstrous animal,' Rabi told CNN. 'Definitely around 8 meters (26 feet) or more total body length.'
Since the mid-19th century, fossils of Deinosuchus have been found on both sides of the ancient seaway and belong to at least two species. The largest of these, Deinosuchus riograndensis, lived on the western side, along the east coast of an island called Laramidia. Bordered on the west by the Pacific Ocean, Laramidia made up less than one-third of the landmass of North America. The continent's other island portion was known as Appalachia.
While Deinosuchus had long been classified as an alligator relative, its distribution on both sides of this vast seaway was an unsolved puzzle. If it was an alligatoroid — a group that today lives only in freshwater — how could Deinosuchus cross a sea spanning more than 620 miles (1,000 kilometers)? One hypothesis suggested that early alligators were saltwater tolerant and then later lost the trait. But that interpretation didn't have much evidence to back it up; it hinged solely on Deinosuchus being included in the alligatoroid group, Rabi explained.
Another possible explanation was that Deinosuchus dispersed across North America before the Western Interior Seaway formed and divided western and eastern populations. However, the fossil record doesn't back that up. The seaway appeared about 100 million years ago, making it approximately 20 million years older than the earliest known Deinosuchus fossils.
'The picture wasn't very coherent,' Rabi said.
For the new analysis, the researchers incorporated data from extinct crocodilians that were not sampled for the group's earlier family trees. These 'missing links' helped the team connect species that were not previously recognized to be related and reassemble the order in which certain traits emerged in the group.
'Our analysis found that saltwater tolerance is a fairly ancient trait of many crocodilians, and was secondarily lost in the alligatoroids,' Rabi said. Having even a moderate tolerance for salt would have greatly benefited ancient crocodile relatives as climate shifts reshaped their habitats, said Dr. Evon Hekkala, a professor and chair of the department of biological sciences at Fordham University in New York City.
'This ecological trait would have allowed lineages of crocodiles in the past to be more opportunistic in times when drastic environmental changes, such as sea level rise, were causing extinctions in less tolerant species,' said Hekkala, who was not involved in the study.
The researchers also constructed a new crocodilian family tree using molecular data from modern crocodilians to clarify features shared by all alligatoroids. The earliest alligators were far smaller than other crocodilians that lived at the same time, the team found. Alligators began to evolve the larger body sizes seen today about 34 million years ago, after the climate cooled and their competition went extinct. But when alligatoroids first appeared, Deinosuchus would have been an outlier due to its massive bulk, according to the new study.
Dwarfism in early alligatoroids was another clue that giant Deinosuchus was no 'greater alligator,' and it likely diverged into a different branch of the family tree before alligatoroids evolved, Rabi said.
The study's approach — combining a new molecular tree with morphology, or analysis of body and skull shapes in crocodilians — paints a clearer picture of how Deinosuchus evolved, Hekkala said. Shifting Deinosuchus away from alligatoroids 'fits much better with our current understanding of ecological flexibility among the extinct and living crocodiles,' she added. 'This new paper really reaches into both the evolutionary and ecological role of this amazing animal.'
While Deinosuchus was one of the largest crocodilians, it wasn't the only giant. Massive crocodilians evolved independently in aquatic environments more than a dozen times over the past 120 million years during all types of global climatic phases — including ice ages, according to the study. Even in living species, reports of individuals measuring 23 feet (7 meters) or more persisted until the 19th century, suggesting enormous Deinosuchus was the rule rather than the exception.
'Giant crocs are more like the norm — of any time,' Rabi said.

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The science of sleep paralysis, a brain-body glitch making people see demons and witches
The science of sleep paralysis, a brain-body glitch making people see demons and witches

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The science of sleep paralysis, a brain-body glitch making people see demons and witches

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Some Dead Sea Scrolls may be even older than archaeologists thought, new study finds
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Some Dead Sea Scrolls may be even older than archaeologists thought, new study finds

Sign up for CNN's Wonder Theory science newsletter. Explore the universe with news on fascinating discoveries, scientific advancements and more. Many of the Dead Sea Scrolls, some of the most widely known archaeological finds of all time, may be older than once thought, according to a new study. The fresh analysis, which paired radiocarbon dating with artificial intelligence, determined some of the biblical manuscripts date to about 2,300 years ago, when their presumed authors lived, said Mladen Popović, lead author of the report published Wednesday in the journal PLOS One. Bedouin shepherds first spotted the scrolls by chance in the Judaean Desert, near the Dead Sea, in 1947. Archaeologists then recovered thousands of fragments belonging to hundreds of manuscripts from 11 caves, all near the site of Khirbat Qumran in what is now the West Bank. 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Mountains are among the planet's most beautiful places. They're also becoming the deadliest
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Mountains are among the planet's most beautiful places. They're also becoming the deadliest

Jan Beutel was half-watching a live stream of Kleines Nesthorn, a mountain peak in the Swiss Alps, when he realized its cacophony of creaks and rumbles was getting louder. He dropped his work, turned up the sound and found himself unable to look away. 'The whole screen exploded,' he said. Beutel, a computer engineer specializing in mountain monitoring, had just witnessed a glacier collapse. On May 28, an avalanche of millions of tons of ice and rock barreled down the slope, burying Blatten, a centuries-old village nestled in the valley below. Local authorities had already evacuated the village after parts of the mountain had crumbled onto the glacier; a 64-year old man believed to have stayed remains missing. But no one expected an event of this magnitude. Successive rock avalanches onto the glacier increased the pressure on the ice, causing it to melt faster and the glacier to accelerate, eventually destabilizing it and pushing it from its bed. The collapse was sudden, violent and catastrophic. 'This one just left no moment to catch a breath,' Beutel said. The underlying causes will take time to unravel. A collapse of this magnitude would have been set in motion by geological factors going back decades at least, said Matthias Huss, a glaciologist at the Swiss university ETH Zürich. But it's 'likely climate change is involved,' he said, as warming temperatures melt the ice that holds mountains together. It's a problem affecting mountains across the planet. People have long been fascinated with mountains for their dramatic beauty. Some make their homes beneath them — around 1 billion live in mountain communities — others are drawn by adventure, the challenge of conquering peaks. These majestic landscapes have always been dangerous, but as the world warms, they are becoming much more unpredictable and much deadlier. 'We do not fully understand the hazard at the moment, nor how the dangers are changing with climate change,' said David Petley, an Earth scientist at the University of Hull in England. Snowy and icy mountains are inherently sensitive to climate change. Very high mountains are etched with fractures filled with ice — called permafrost — which glues them together. As the permafrost thaws, mountains can become destabilized. 'We are seeing more large rock slope collapses in many mountains as a result,' Petley told CNN. Glaciers are also melting at a terrifyingly rapid rate, especially in regions such as the Alps and the Andes, which face the possibility of a glacier-free future. As these rivers of ancient ice disappear, they expose mountain faces, causing more rocks to fall. There have been several big collapses in the Alps in recent years as ice melts and permafrost thaws. In July 2022, about 64,000 tons of water, rock and ice broke off from the Marmolada Glacier in northern Italy after unusually hot weather caused massive melting. The subsequent ice avalanche killed 11 people hiking a popular trail. In 2023, the peak of Fluchthorn, a mountain on the border between Switzerland and Austria, collapsed as permafrost thawed, sending more than 100,000 cubic meters of rock into the valley below. 'This really seems to be something new. There seems to be a trend in such big events in high mountain areas,' Huss said. Melting glaciers can also form lakes, which can become so full that they burst their banks, sending water and debris cascading down mountainsides. In 2023, a permafrost landslide caused a large glacial lake in Sikkim, India, to break its banks, causing a catastrophic deluge that killed at least 55 people. Last year, a glacial lake outburst caused destructive flooding in Juneau, Alaska — a now regular occurrence for the city. 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Scientists do have tools to monitor mountains and warn communities. 'There are fantastic instruments that can predict quite accurately when a rock mass (or) ice mass is going to come down,' Huss said. The difficulty is knowing where to look when a landscape is constantly changing in unpredictable ways. 'This is what climate change actually does… there are more new and previously unrecognized situations,' Huss said. These are particularly hard to deal with in developing countries, which don't have the resources for extensive monitoring. Scientists say the only way to reduce the impact of the climate crisis on mountains is to bring down global temperatures, but some changes are already locked in. 'Even if we manage to stabilize the climate right now, (glaciers) will continue to retreat significantly,' Huss said. Almost 40% of the world's glaciers are already doomed, according to a new study. 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