How Titanoboa, the 40-Foot-Long Snake, Was Found
In Colombia, the fossil of a gargantuan snake has stunned scientists, forcing them to rethink the nature of prehistoric life
- By Guy Gugliotta
- Illustration by Paul Mirocha
- Smithsonian magazine, April 2012, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
By examining these joints, ridges and knobs, and describing individual vertebrae as sets of coordinate points on a graph, Head and Polly created a template for all snakes. Over the course of evolution “snakes get bigger by adding more vertebrae,” Head said, and there can be as many as 300 vertebrae in the spinal column of a modern python, boa or anaconda. “But the big ones get more vertebrae only up to a point, then the vertebrae just get bigger.”
After developing coordinates for individual Titanoboa vertebrae, Head and Polly used the model to position them in their correct spinal location and determine Titanoboa’s length.The team published its first results in Nature in early 2009, saying Titanoboa was between 42 feet and 49 feet long, with a mean weight of 2,500 pounds. The Cerrejón vertebrae were all of comparable size even though they were from different animals. With Titanoboa, enormous was the rule, not the exception.
The Cerrejón team had found what appeared to be an authentic primeval monster. Titanoboa was as long as a school bus and weighed as much as a small rhino. Aside from the boid-style vertebrae, however, that was about all that could be said about the creature at first.
The discovery last year of the Titanoboa skull was key to advancing the research. “It’s not beautiful, but it’s a snake skull and there aren’t many of those,” Bloch said. “When we went down to Cerrejón, we thought ‘Well, pie in the sky we’ll find a skull of Titanoboa—’”
“—and then we did,” Head added.
They were sitting side by side in Bloch’s Gainesville office, in front of two microscopes. The process of assessing new bones from a fossil like Titanoboa is tedious and repetitive. They were comparing the contours of individual skull bones with exquisitely preserved modern boa, anaconda and python skulls from the university’s snake collections.
Bloch and Head wanted to determine if their first analysis—that Titanoboa was more boa than anaconda—would hold up. Fragments of jawbone suggested that Titanoboa’s mouth and whole head could have been over two feet long. A quadrate—a hinge bone connecting the lower jaw to the skull—enabled the back of the lower jaw to extend behind Titanoboa’s brain. Its mouth could “open big and open wide,” Head said.
There was at least one inconsistency, however. By looking at the number of holes in the jawbone fragments, Bloch and Head concluded that Titanoboa had more closely packed teeth than modern-day boas. “Is it more a specialized fish-eater?” Head asked. “If you’ve got lots of teeth, it’s easier to grab slippery, scaly fish.”
As far as Titanoboa was concerned, however, it probably did not matter. The crocs and the turtles undoubtedly ate fish, but Titanoboa was at the top of the food chain. It could eat fish, but it could also eat the crocs and turtles. “Some snakes—especially anacondas—can and do eat crocodilians,” Head said. “Still, wouldn’t it be strange if, instead of a monster, this is just a big, lazy snake that sits on the bottom grabbing fish as they swim by?”
Bloch laughed. “I don’t think so.”
Eventually they agreed that Titanoboa’s skull was different from that of other boas, but they couldn’t determine if the extinct animal was more closely related to a boa or anaconda.
The size of the snake immediately raised questions about how it got to be that big, and what it needed to survive. The Cerrejón team concluded in 2009 that Titanoboa had to have lived in a climate with a mean ambient temperature between 86 and 93 degrees Fahrenheit, substantially higher than the hottest average for today’s tropical forests, which is 82 degrees.
That assertion, Head acknowledged, “has been extremely controversial.”
For the past several years, the Titanoboa researchers and other experts have been trying to understand and model the climate that the giant snake lived in. There’s been some disagreement about how best to estimate the temperature 58 million years ago.
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Comments (43)
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why whould titanoboa be 40 or 50 feet long
Posted by jakob hisgrove on May 5,2013 | 02:56 AM
Continued- keeping the point that snakes grow till they die, can a snake live enough to grow 40 feet, in deeper and dense rain forests??
Posted by tejas on February 14,2013 | 09:30 AM
Is it possible that snakes can grow to that length with temparatures of this age?? Somewhere in deep rain forests??
Posted by Tejas on February 14,2013 | 09:27 AM
This is a fantastic paper. In Sinhala,'Henakandaya' means -giant serpent.'Anaicondran' is a Tamil word which means - the elephant killer.For its name,anaconda owes to these two terms.But it seems these epithets are more suitable to the Titanoboa.I hope in the coming years lot more Titanoboa-mysteries will be unravelled,thanks to the palentologists.Who knows,may be more Titanoboa fossils would be discovered. Fingers crossing.
Posted by Tania Ghosh on February 7,2013 | 05:25 AM
Hi my name is Grace and I am 8 years old. I am really interested in this snake! Now I am trying to figure out the size of the Titanaboa's eggs. And i hope I get to see these back bones, because they look awesome! Love, Grace P.S. I live in california
Posted by Grace M. on February 5,2013 | 10:28 AM
I love entertaining my self wit documentries
Posted by Obeds on January 20,2013 | 03:31 PM
this is awesome
Posted by on December 19,2012 | 09:59 AM
oh and btw titanoboa was not here when we were alive so the story u just fread was a lie
Posted by madison on December 7,2012 | 12:36 PM
i'ts veri nice.
Posted by on December 4,2012 | 11:48 PM
It was super interesting!!!!!!
Posted by Pokyface on November 28,2012 | 11:59 AM
i just love this article my name is christian russel and i live in woodlawn newyork find me at he park
Posted by christian russel on November 28,2012 | 11:58 AM
I love reading about this but have to say I took my daughter to DC this summer specifically to see the exhibit at the Natural History Museum and it was a disappointment - stuck back in a corner, basically a few poster panels, and a fiberglass model. Honestly I'm not sure what I expected, but for all the publicity, I thought it would be front and center and bigger. My daughter is a snake owner - went looking for anything in the gift shops to take home - no t-shirts, no postcards, no nothing. It was a very poorly done effort, not up to Smithsonian level. But we have enjoyed the online articles.
Posted by Carole on November 13,2012 | 11:26 AM
Where did you go to discover Titanoboa?
Posted by on September 27,2012 | 05:05 PM
I have seen this snake alive in Central America near Colon Panama on its way toward the canal. Yes, the 50 foot one alive, in 1987. Triple canopy at night in complete and total darkness while sleeping tactically, a snake so big it could have eaten one of Dads full grown cows, made noise with crashing and breaking sounds as it slithered upon me stopping just to come over to check me out. All I had was a rifle and a bowie knife that is government issued. Probably snoring like something good to eat. It did come up on top of me and turned just by raising its head several feet over the green brush and gradually continue through a clearing. That is when I hit it with a red tactical light. My thoughts had been right. The only way to combat something that big was to keep my weapon and bayonet where I could, perhaps, hold its mouth open enough to get out or cut my way out if I was swallowed. This was the Devil himself. Being scared was like being ready with the advanced training. Locked and Cocked. Adrenaline with a plan. Too dark. Just wait it out. Next morning I climbed out of my hooch and the trail it left was gargantuan. The brush was split down the middle and with the rain and bed of leaves the trail remained covered and flattened in a zillion ants and ancient left overs from the 2500 year or more old trees and under brush. The low brush was crushed and torn, not broken or pulled up. I don't care what anybody says, I believe I saw it and know snakes. Killed many around home. Until I saw this replica of an ancient species it is as like it happened yesterday. If You want to find the Devil just head down and start around the Panama Canal. Wonder what the ships are dumping over to attract snakes that big. Just saying. Snakes hounds. It is real!
Posted by Tim on September 14,2012 | 04:35 PM
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