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Carcharodontosaurus
Carcharodontosaurus saharicus
Artist's reconstruction of Carcharodontosaurus.

Classification

Dinosaur; Theropod; Allosauroid; Carcharodontosaurid; Carcharodontosaurus

Species

Name Means

Shark toothed lizard

Pronunciation

kar-KAR-oh-DON-to-SORE-uss

Weight

  • 5-8 metric tons

Height

  • 4 metres

Length

  • 13.6 metres

Timespan

100-93 mya

Location

Africa

Diet

Carnivorous; hunter and scavenger

Carcharodontosaurus, meaning Shark toothed lizard, was an enormous theropod dinosaur native to Africa 100 - 93 million years ago during the late Aptian to early Cemonian periods of the Cretaceous. Despite being poorly known, Carcharodontosaurus is likely one of the largest species of theropod dinosaur, larger than Tyrannosaurus, but smaller than Spinosaurus. Two species of Carcharodontosaurus are currently known. C. saharicus is the type species, while C. iguidensis is smaller.

Discovery[]

Carcharodontosaurus tooth

Carcharodontosaurus saharicus tooth.

Carcharodontosaurus fossils were first found by Charles Depéret and J. Savornin in the Continental intercalaire of Algeria (dating to the Albian stage) in 1927. Originally called Megalosaurus saharicus (many theropods were once erroneously referred to as Megalosaurus), its name was changed in 1931 by Ernst Stromer von Reichenbach to that used today. Stromer named Carcharodontosaurus "for its mainly Carcharodon-like teeth", which were "not recurved, almost bilaterally symmetrical but with convex edges."

Fossils[]

C

Paul Sereno next to a cast of a C.iguidensis skull

Very little is known about Carcharodontosaurus and Carcharodontosaurids in general. The Holotype of Carcharodontosaurus, discovered in 1912 by Stromer along with Spinosaurus. After describing Spinosaurus, he described another large Theropod which he dubbed 'Spinosaurus B'. It was not until the 1930's when more fragmentary remains, albeit sub-adult, was it realised this 'Spinosaurus B' was actually very different from Spinosaurus, and so Stromer re-named it (and Megalosaurus saharicus in the process) Carcharodontosaurus saharicus, meaning "Saharan shark-toothed reptile". Then in the late 1990's, Paul Sereno, in an expedition that yielded Suchomimus and new Sarcosuchus fossils, found some new large Carcharodontosaurid jaw fragments. These were formally described in 2007 and were dubbed Carcharodontosaurus iguidensis. C. saharicus is estimated to be 12.8m long. Although a study in 2007 claimed it was 13.2m. If C. iguidensis were in the same proportiones as C.saharicus who had a 1.6m skull, a C.iguidensis who has a 1.4m skull would be around 10 to 11m long and 4 to 4.5t in weight.

Description[]

Carcharodontosaurus was a massive predatory theropod dinosaur. Although its brain was not as large as those of tyrannosaurids, Carcharodontosaurus was still obviously smart enough to plan hunting strategies. At first glance, Carcharodontosaurus seems to have many similarities to its relative, Allosaurus; however the two theropods are actually quite different (except for the fact that they are both allosauroids.)

Paleontologists have classified Carcharodontosaurus in its own family, the Carcharodontosauridae. Being the type genus, Carcharodontosaurus is obviously typical of the family. Its fossils consist mostly of fragmentary skulls. Reconstruction is based on Carcharodontosaurus' close relative, Giganotosaurus. Both massive theropods are carcharodontosaurids, in the allosaur group. Like Giganotosaurus, Carcharodontosaurus had a lightweight, porous skull with large fenestrae. It would have been a powerful hunter, with long front arms equipped with hook-like claws, and narrow jaws with teeth much like those of the great white shark. It would have been graceful, and elegant in design. Like many allosauroids, it also had a ridge above each of its eyes.

Largest Theropods 2

A scale chart showing C. iguidensis alongside other giant theropods, C. iguidensis in yellow.

Although poorly known, Carcharodontosaurus was one of the largest predatory dinosaur ever, large as Giganotosaurus but smaller than  Spinosaurus. C. sahiricus measured between 12 and 12.8 meters long and weighed in at around 5 to 6 tonnes. However, the larger C.iguidennis measured up to 10-11m long and weighed   4t. Ever since its discovery it has been a contender for the title of largest Theropod. Its initial indetification led to massive hype, despite Tyrannosaurus was of a similar length but bulkier, and the seemingly forgotten Spinosaurus was bigger still at 14-15m at the time. Carcharodontosaurus fell out of the public view until Paul Sereno discovered some more fossils in the 1990's.This specimen, SMG din-1, was larger than Tyrannosaurus, then gained fame. A other, smaller species, C. iguidensis, was described in 2007.

Species[]

Two species of Carcharodontosaurus are currently known: Carcharodontosaurus saharicus, the larger type species, and Carcharodontosaurus igiduensis which is smaller and lesser-known.

Carcharodontosaurus saharicus[]

Carcharodontosaurus

Life restoration of C. Saharicus

Carcharodontosaurus saharicus is the type species, and much better-known than C. igiduensis. Its skull is less porous than that of Carcharodontosaurus igiduensis; this seems to indicate that its jaws would have been less flexible. It is likely that this was made up for by a stronger bite force. C. saharicus, although becoming well-known in popular culture, is larger and more powerful than traditionally depicted. This carnivore would have likely had a more powerful bite force than its slightly smaller cousin, Carcharodontosaurus igiduensis. When Carcharodontosaurus is mentioned, it is almost always referring to Carcharodontosaurus saharicus. This species was discovered by Charles Depéret and J. Savornin, in 1927. It averaged 12 metres (40 feet) in length, similar in size to large specimens of Allosaurus and average Giganotosaurus. Carcharodontosaurus saharicus' maximum size was probably around 13 metres (42.5 feet), rivalling better-known theropods such as Tyrannosaurus and Giganotosaurus in length.

Carcharodontosaurus igiduensis[]

Carcharodontosaurus Igiduensis

Life restoration of C. igiduensis

Unlike C. saharicus, Carcharodontosaurus igiduensis is a recently-discovered dinosaur. Its fossils are fragmentary, but based on them its skull seems to be more porous than that of Carcharodontosaurus saharicus. The dinosaur would have been a very large and deadly theropod. Igiduensis would have had scissor-shaped jaws, and the same teeth (albeit smaller) than C. saharicus, giving it the perfect weapon for slicing flesh. This massive theropod was only discovered in 2007, by Paul Sereno. It was even smaller than Carcharodontosaurus saharicus. C. igiduensis would have hunted the large ornithopods and perhaps even sauropods that inhabited its region. It would have reached 4-4.5 tonnes, and 10-11 metres in length.

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