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 5 of 5)
Titanoboa was a coldblooded animal whose body temperature depended on that of its habitat. Reptiles can grow bigger in warmer climates, where they can absorb enough energy to maintain a necessary metabolic rate. That’s why insects, reptiles and amphibians tend to be larger in the tropics than in the temperate zone. In this view, extraordinary heat is what made the snake a titan. The same principle would explain why ancient turtles and lungfish of Cerrejón were, like Titanoboa, much larger than their modern relatives.
The relationship between coldblooded body mass and ambient temperature was the subject of a 2005 study by researchers at the Nuclear Physics Institute in St. Petersburg, Russia. By examining species sizes at a variety of different ambient temperatures, Anastassia Makarieva and colleagues calculated how fossils could be used to estimate temperatures in the distant past.
Head and Bloch used the Russian data, plus information about today’s anacondas and their Amazon habitat, to conclude that Titanoboa would have needed surprisingly warm temperatures to survive in ancient Cerrejón.
Several researchers, however, disagree with their conclusion. Paleoclimatologist Kale Sniderman, of the University of Melbourne in Australia, is skeptical of Makarieva’s approach. He noted that an ancient lizard from temperate Australia grew to at least 16.5 feet in length. Applying the model to that fossil predicts that lizards currently living in tropical areas should be capable of reaching 33 feet. In another critique, Stanford’s Mark Denny, a specialist in biomechanics, says the Titanoboa researchers have it backward: The snake was so large and was producing so much metabolic heat that the ambient temperature must have been four to six degrees cooler than the team’s estimate, or the snake would have overheated.
Head, Bloch, Polly and Jaramillo defended the team’s approach, but they acknowledge that their original estimate may have been a bit high. Recent data derived from nearby marine core samples have suggested temperatures closer to 82 to 88 degrees. Even so, they said, Titanoboa’s forest was much warmer than tropical forests today.
Analyses of fossilized leaves from that forest support the idea that it was sweltering. Jaramillo and Herrera studied carbon isotopes in the leaves and the density of pores that let water in and out. They calculated that the levels of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere were 50 percent higher than today, which would have led to high temperatures on land. This fits with estimates from other techniques that the mean temperature was at least 82.5 degrees, and probably considerably higher.
The temperature has implications for how species survived in the tropics—and how they will survive as the climate changes. The rapid contamination of earth’s atmosphere by greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide is causing global warming, a phenomenon, which, if unchecked, may cause massive die-off in species that can’t cope with the heat.
As temperatures rise, at some point plants should become unable to photosynthesize properly. “Figuring out when the different plant groups max out is a difficult question,” said Wing. “When a plant can’t shed the heat, it eventually dies.”
During the time of Titanoboa, said Jaramillo, “we find a very productive forest, with a lot of biomass.” If Titanoboa and its lush ecosystem were in harmony at high temperatures, then global warming may not lead to ecological catastrophe—at least for some plants. “Perhaps modern plants have the ability to cope,” Jaramillo said.
Jaramillo and other members of the Titanoboa team, however, point out that coping with climate change is a lot easier if you have millions of years to adapt to the warming trend. Making the adjustment in 200 years, as climatologists characterize the pace of today’s greenhouse effect, or even 2,000 years, is a different matter altogether.
The paleontologists will return to Cerrejón this year to look for more fossils, more species and more evidence of what the world was like near the Equator 58 million years ago.
“The hardest thing to know about the past,” Wing said, “is how different it was.”
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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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