Titanoboa, (Titanoboa cerrejonensis), extinct snake that lived during the Paleocene Epoch (66 million to 56 million years ago), considered to be the largest known member of the suborder Serpentes. Titanoboa is known from several fossils that have been dated to 58 million to 60 million years ago. From extrapolations of body size made from excavated vertebrae (individual sections of the backbone), paleontologists have estimated that the body length of the average adult Titanoboa was roughly 13 metres (42.7 feet) and the average weight about 1,135 kg (1.25 tons). Titanoboa is related to living anacondas and boas, but it is uncertain whether it was more closely related to one or another of these modern constrictor snakes.

Titanoboa was first described in 2009, some five years after it was excavated from rocks exposed at the Cerrejón coal mine in Colombia, which lies to the west of the mouth of Lake Maracaibo. The remains of approximately 30 individuals have been recovered. The majority are adults, but some juveniles have been found. Most specimens are made up of vertebrae and ribs, which is typical of snake fossils. It is estimated that Titanoboa may have had more than 250 vertebrae. At least one nearly complete specimen with a skull has been recovered. The presence of such a large number of individuals displaying the same gigantic proportions demonstrates that 13-metre lengths were probably the norm for adults of this species. By comparison, adult anacondas average about 6.5 metres (21.3 feet) in length, whereas record-breaking anacondas are about 9 metres (about 29.5 feet) long. No living snake has ever been found with a verified length in excess of 9.6 metres (about 31.5 feet).

The snake’s enormous size is thought to be closely tied to the climate of the Paleocene. Snakes, similar to other poikilothermic (cold-blooded) animals, have metabolic rates that are influenced by the temperature of the ambient environment. To maintain normal growth, snakes must have the proper amount of warmth. A snake would need an exceptionally warm environment, such as the one that characterized the Paleocene, to grow as large as Titanoboa. The coals mined at Cerrejón are formed from deposits left by an extensive Paleocene swamp situated along the margins of an ancient shallow sea, which sat at the base of the early precursors of the Andes Mountains. This ancient environment had been similar in composition to the swamps of the Mississippi River delta or Everglades in North America; however, it was situated in the tropics at a time when Earth’s climate was exceptionally warm.

Sea otter (Enhydra lutris), also called great sea otter, rare, completely marine otter of the northern Pacific, usually found in kelp beds. Floats on back. Looks like sea otter laughing. saltwater otters
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Titanoboa probably spent much of its time in the water. The sedimentary structure of the region’s rocks and the preservation of water-loving organisms (such as mangrovelike plants, crocodilians, turtles, and fishes) as fossils in the strata indicate that the region was waterlogged. Similarly, modern anacondas spend most of their time in or near the water, where they hide amid vegetation in the shallows and ambush prey. It is extremely likely that Titanoboa had similar habits, because the animal’s large size would have made living on land awkward or impossible.

Paul David Polly
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Palaeocene Epoch

Paleocene Epoch, first major worldwide division of rocks and time of the Paleogene Period, spanning the interval between 66 million and 56 million years ago. The Paleocene Epoch was preceded by the Cretaceous Period and was followed by the Eocene Epoch. The Paleocene is subdivided into three ages and their corresponding rock stages: the Danian, Selandian, and Thanetian.

Marine rocks of Paleocene age are relatively limited in occurrence, and as a consequence much of the information about this epoch comes from terrestrial deposits. The most complete picture of Paleocene terrestrial life and environments is afforded by the rock record of North America; elsewhere, Paleocene animals, especially mammals, are lacking or rare or are only of late Paleocene age. Prominent faunal remains of the late Paleocene Epoch are known from the regions of Cernay, France; Gashato, Mongolia; and the Chico River of Patagonian Argentina.

The climate of North America during the Paleocene Epoch was characterized by a general warming trend with little or no frost. Seasonal variations probably can best be described as alternations of dry and wet seasons.

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primate: Paleocene

One of the most striking features of vertebrate life in the Paleocene Epoch was the complete absence of dinosaurs and other reptilian groups that were dominant during the preceding Cretaceous Period. Another striking feature was the rapid proliferation and evolution of mammals. Paleocene mammals included representatives of many groups or orders that still exist today, though the Paleocene forms were mostly archaic (that is, descended from yet earlier forms) or highly specialized. Paleocene mammals included Cretaceous species such as opossum-like marsupials and, especially, the archaic and unusual multituberculates—herbivorous animals that had teeth very similar in some respects to those of the later, more advanced rodents. The condylarths—hoofed animals that were very important members of the Paleocene animal kingdom—included forms that were evolving toward herbivorousness while still retaining insectivorous-carnivorous traits of their Cretaceous ancestors. Primates became more abundant in the middle Paleocene; they displayed characteristics intermediate between the insectivores and the lemurs, especially in their dental anatomy.

Late in the Paleocene, mammalian evolution showed a trend toward larger forms and more varied assemblages. Primitive mammalian carnivores—notably the creodonts (a group of catlike and doglike animals)—appeared, as did large herbivores, ancestral rodents, and the first known supposed primates. The Gashato fauna from Mongolia contains the remains of the earliest known hare (Eurymylus), and among Paleocene mammal remains from South America are many early representatives of animals that became dominant in subsequent epochs of the Paleogene Period.

Life in the early Paleocene oceans took hundreds of thousands to millions of years to recover from the mass extinction event at the end of the Cretaceous Period, but by Late Paleocene times many groups of marine invertebrate animals had diversified considerably, including mollusks and plankton. Highly fossiliferous marine sediments from the Upper Paleocene are well known along the Gulf and Atlantic coastal plains of North America.

This article was most recently revised and updated by John P. Rafferty.
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