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
In the lowland tropics of northern Colombia, 60 miles from the Caribbean coast, Cerrejón is an empty, forbidding, seemingly endless horizon of dusty outback, stripped of vegetation and crisscrossed with dirt roads that lead to enormous pits 15 miles in circumference. It is one of the world’s largest coal operations, covering an area larger than Washington, D.C. and employing some 10,000 workers. The multinational corporation that runs the mine, Carbones del Cerrejón Limited, extracted 31.5 million tons of coal last year alone.
Cerrejón also happens to be one of the world’s richest, most important fossil deposits, providing scientists with a unique snapshot of the geological moment when the dinosaurs had just disappeared and a new environment was emerging. “Cerrejón is the best, and probably the only, window on a complete ancient tropical ecosystem anywhere in the world,” said Carlos Jaramillo, a paleontologist at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute. “The plants, the animals, everything. We have it all, and you can’t find it anywhere else in the tropics.”
Fifty-eight million years ago, a few million years after the fall of the dinosaurs, Cerrejón was an immense, swampy jungle where everything was hotter, wetter and bigger than it is today. The trees had wider leaves, indicating greater precipitation—more than 150 inches of rain per year, compared with 80 inches for the Amazon now. Mean temperatures may have hovered in the mid- to high-80s Fahrenheit or higher. Deep water from north-flowing rivers swirled around stands of palm trees, hardwoods, occasional hummocks of earth and decaying vegetation. Mud from the flood plain periodically coated, covered and compressed the dead leaves, branches and animal carcasses in steaming layers of decomposing muck dozens of feet thick.
The river basin held turtles with shells twice the size of manhole covers and crocodile kin—at least three different species—more than a dozen feet long. And there were seven-foot-long lungfish, two to three times the size of their modern Amazon cousins.
The lord of this jungle was a truly spectacular creature—a snake more than 40 feet long and weighing more than a ton. This giant serpent looked something like a modern-day boa constrictor, but behaved more like today’s water-dwelling anaconda. It was a swamp denizen and a fearsome predator, able to eat any animal that caught its eye. The thickest part of its body would be nearly as high as a man’s waist. Scientists call it Titanoboa cerrejonensis.
It was the largest snake ever, and if its astounding size alone wasn’t enough to dazzle the most sunburned fossil hunter, the fact of its existence may have implications for understanding the history of life on earth and possibly even for anticipating the future.
Titanoboa is now the star of “Titanoboa: Monster Snake,” premiering April 1 on the Smithsonian Channel. Research on the snake and its environment continues, and I caught up with the Titanoboa team during the 2011 field season.
Jonathan Bloch, a University of Florida paleontologist, and Jason Head, a paleontologist at the University of Nebraska, were crouched beneath a relentless tropical sun examining a set of Titanoboa remains with a Smithsonian Institution intern named Jorge Moreno-Bernal, who had discovered the fossil a few weeks earlier. All three were slathered with sunblock and carried heavy water bottles. They wore long-sleeved shirts and tramped around in heavy hiking boots on the shadeless moonscape whose ground cover was shaved away years ago by machinery.
“It’s probably an animal in the 30- to 35-foot range,” Bloch said of the new find, but size was not what he was thinking about. What had Bloch’s stomach aflutter on this brilliant Caribbean forenoon was lying in the shale five feet away.
“You just never find a snake skull, and we have one,” Bloch said. Snake skulls are made of several delicate bones that are not very well fused together. “When the animal dies, the skull falls apart,” Bloch explained. “The bones get lost.”
The snake skull embraced by the Cerrejón shale mudstone was a piece of Titanoboa that Bloch, Head and their colleagues had been hoping to find for years. “It offers a whole new set of characteristics,” Bloch said. The skull will enhance researchers’ ability to compare Titanoboa to other snakes and figure out where it sits on the evolutionary tree. It will provide further information about its size and what it ate.
Even better, added Head, gesturing at the skeleton lying at his feet, “our hypothesis is that the skull matches the skeleton. We think it’s one animal.”
Looking around the colossal mine, evidence of an ancient wilderness can be seen everywhere. Every time another feet-thick vein of coal is trucked away, an underlayer of mudstone is left behind, rich in the fossils of exotic leaves and plants and in the bones of fabulous creatures.
“When I find something good, it’s a biological reaction,” said Bloch. “It starts in my stomach.”
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Comments (40)
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
hey... i knew it was out there... titanoboa.... it would make perfect sense.. if there were dinosaurs back then... living at a time when the earth's temperature etc. and climate made it possible... why not giant snakes??? I think we're just at the tip of the iceberg here....i think there're lots more fossils etc. just waiting to be discovered...stuff that we only can imagine in science fiction... but this is real!!!!!
Posted by earl douglas on August 18,2012 | 10:19 PM
Hi, I would just like to point out that the artists rendering of the snake is a little off. Only poisonous snakes have elliptical or cat's-eye pupils. Except for the coral snake.
Posted by Jason on August 12,2012 | 10:42 AM
i think its incredible that something such as this does exist, but i cannot say the thought did not already lay in my mind. With all the other "super sized" creatures they have discoverd such as the " dino croc" or the much above average size ancient tortise i somewhat figured before long someone would discover a absolutley gigantic snake . i would much like to visit the smithsonian to see this exhibit.
Posted by jack cargile on August 3,2012 | 04:24 PM
This is strange and a mysterious creator of a kind
Posted by CHRISTLING on July 28,2012 | 11:44 AM
a megalodon shark would eat the snake.
Posted by gagoonies on May 30,2012 | 04:24 PM
this snake is sooooooo cool but i wish i could just look it in the eyes and laugh but i would probably get eaten...lol
Posted by selina on May 3,2012 | 03:10 PM
My big question is if "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." Then it stands to reason, that our current creature populations will start to enlarge since our tempetures are rising. Right???
Posted by Kayla on April 28,2012 | 05:22 PM
its the greatest thing ever!!!!!!!!!!!! Titanoboa RULES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by talanya on April 10,2012 | 03:25 PM
its the greatest thing ever!!!!!!!!!!!! Titanoboa RULES!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Posted by talanya on April 10,2012 | 03:25 PM
This was a great article! I am an Earth Science Teacher and a Spanish Teacher. This article caught the best of both fields. Funny how man's imagination (the movie Anaconda) bears out a past truth--oh well, there is nothing new under the sun!
Posted by Linda on April 7,2012 | 02:27 AM
Nate B, The age of the earth was discovered by Hutton in the 1790s, 110 years before radioactivity was discovered. The universe is simply a lot bigger than you think it is. I invite you to look around you with an open mind.
Posted by Curtis Price on April 7,2012 | 01:12 PM
This is just amazing. I find it so fascinating that such creatures come from such little snakes. It just shocks and amazes me to know that such a creature exists.
Posted by emokittykat on April 5,2012 | 12:33 PM
Great article and great discovery. I a zoologist and native from Colombia. At the begining of the 19th century there were found large anacondas in the eastern part of Colombia in the geografic region called Llanos Orientales. At least one or two specimens are stuffed-preserved in the museum called La Salle Museum in Bogota. These specimens are large and I invite the scientists to visit this museum to at least have an idea of their size, smaller of course than the Titanoboa, but close.
Posted by Uriel Buitrago on April 4,2012 | 11:15 AM
Good thinking Nate b! One could also ask how its possible that no erosion can be detected in these layers. Millions of years, but no sun, water, wind, oxygene, co2, cold, nothing! That's just not possible..... Unlessssssssss there was no millions of years and the layers were deposited in rapid succession. Then there would be no time for erosion.
Posted by Zyril on April 3,2012 | 11:34 AM
@Auke The tip of South America was once joined to India and Madagascar. The plates split 90+ million years ago with the ancestors of coconuts, bananas, plantains, and legumes already thriving and evolving on all sides of the split. The ancestors of plants we know today as 'Asian' in origin can certainly appear in fossils from South America, and they do. http://smithsonianscience.org/2010/04/newly-discovered-thick-shelled-turtle-species-co-existed-with-world’ For the South American origin of coconut palms in particular, see the work of Alan Meerow cited here: http://perfectgardeningtips.com/2010/08/14/coconuttree-of-life-the-symbol-of-tropics/ It's a mistake to use what you know of historical times to interpret fossils that are much older. It has frequently happened that species that existed on one continent died out or had their numbers reduced, then their descendants from elsewhere in the world were brought to that continent again in historical times. A good example of this would be horses in North America. North America was also once home to its own elephants and rhinos. The species of these creatures that Americans today encounter in zoos were brought from Africa or Asia, but natural history remains what it is. Ancestors and relatives of these creatures once did roam the North American continent. Specialists can make mistakes, but non-specialists tend to make them much more often. When the subject is outside one's field, some caution in pronouncing an authority 'wrong' is always in order. Herrera is right about the plants he found, and what he shares has much to teach the rest of us about past life in the Americas.
Posted by Alton on April 1,2012 | 08:39 AM
Fascinating discovery! Titanoboa is an amazing creature indeed. Thanks to the Smithsonian for making this information available. Congratulations to all the scientists who worked on the project. It will be interesting to see what more will be discovered about this period of time in earth history. For those comment writers who expressed interest in knowing more about the science of determining geological time scales, the Baylor University Department of Geology offers a very helpful FAQ page: http://www.baylor.edu/geology/index.php?id=61728 Enjoy!
Posted by Alton on April 1,2012 | 07:21 AM
What time is the TV program "Titanoboa: Monster Snake," on in Florida?
Posted by Paul Doran on March 31,2012 | 04:12 PM
this snake is AWESOME how would you like to find one of those under your bed or in your closet! love this snake!!! XD
Posted by nyan cat on March 31,2012 | 01:10 PM
My 6 year old would like to know: who would win a fight; a titanoboa or a megalodon shark? Thank you for a great article. We can't wait to see the model of titanoboa.
Posted by Barbara on March 31,2012 | 08:31 AM
I took Anthropology 100 this quarter at Green River College, Auburn, WA. and I loved it. The only bad thing about it was, I had to take it online. My instructor, Marianne Jacobs, was so informative and helpful that I have now formed an attachment for this field of study. This article has furthered my curiosity for the past and present of mankind and animals alike. Can you help me find someone in any field of study that may need help from a non-professional? I am willing to work for free and I am a hard worker. I am in my second year and am willing to travel to any country. Thank you for your awesome articles that I receive almost daily, and I truly admire the pictures. Jessica Stevens
Posted by Jessica Stevens on March 30,2012 | 03:10 AM
Interesting article, but I got one comment: coconuts and bananas are not a part of present day neotropical ecosystems. They naturally belong in the Pacific and were introduced in the Americas by man. This might be trivial to the story, but it would add to the credit of the Smithsonian if such errors would be omitted.
Posted by Auke on March 28,2012 | 07:58 PM
What an exciting find, great work gentlemen! I hope to read more on this.
Posted by Justin on March 25,2012 | 06:22 PM
This is a remarkable story. El Cerejon is an active large surface coal mine. No mining- no fossils uncovered. I imagine the environment is that fossils are uncovered one day and subject to destruction as part of the mining process the next day or soon thereafter. There must be remarkable cooperation between the paleontologists and the mining professionals at the site. I am a retired registered professional mining engineer who was three hours short of a geology degree specializing in paleontology from Lehigh Un. Keep looking. Congrats to all.
Posted by Dave Eyer on March 25,2012 | 03:23 PM
Mary b. the calculation for millions of years comes from dating of the rock strata. through radiometric dating they come to an assumed date of the rock layer, then they date the animal in that layer the same date. however trees have been found in various deposits around the world that travel through multiple layers showing that either the tree did not decompose for millions of years, or the layers were layed down rapidly. a large scale catastrophe, say like a flood, is a better explination. also radiometric dating is good for say igneous(volcanic) rock, not sedementary(hardened mud)rock, which is where you usually find fossils. radiometric dating is the process of looking at the composition of the rock, say argon, and then seeing how much of it has decomposed into its daughter element, potassium, and then calculatting the decay rate to find your date. this is a very simplified explenation. the assumptions are then made that no outside force increased or decreased the decay rate, that no potassium or argon seeped in from the outside and that the rock sample has not been contaminated in any way. all in all alot of assumptions. the dateing methods are not very accurate and we need to look instead to eyewitness accounts. as there was no one there to witness these events millions of years ago then we have a problem, no observable beginning to our scientific theory.
Posted by nate b on March 23,2012 | 01:36 AM
Thanks for the effort made to reveal the truth
Posted by deepthi rathnayake on March 22,2012 | 11:44 PM
What a terrific article. Just marvelous. Hats off to Mr's Bloch and Head and all the others who have taken part in this exciting find, and interpretation of the Titanoboa. I was fascinated. Hope to read more...
Posted by Ruth on March 22,2012 | 07:36 PM
I find this titanoboa discovery very interesting, however I am always skeptical about the millions of years that scientist believe they can calculate the age of their finds. Please inform as to what formula they use to arrive at 58 million years. Thank you. mary b.
Posted by -mary allard on March 22,2012 | 06:20 PM
it wouldnt suprised me if we didnt have that big snake here in united states because ive seem some huge water mockisons some that i would wish i could kill and then uh stuff on my wall.
Posted by shadoe on March 22,2012 | 12:36 PM