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Around 95 million years ago, a giant relative of modern crocodiles ruled the coastlines and waterways of what would one day become north central Texas.

A team including UT’s Stephanie Drumheller-Horton has identified this species, Deltasuchus motherali. They found that adults grew up to 20 feet long and, based on the bite marks discovered on the fossilized bones of prey animals, ate whatever they wanted in their environment, from turtles to dinosaurs.

The team found the bones in a place one normally doesn’t think to look for ancient fossils—in the heart of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex.

The findings were recently published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

Drumheller-Horton collaborated with Thomas Adams, curator of paleontology and geology at the Witte Museum in San Antonio, Texas, and Chris Noto of the University of Wisconsin–Parkside.

The site that produced the new species was discovered in Arlington, Texas, in 2003 by amateur fossil hunters Art Sahlstein, Bill Walker, and Phil Kirchoff.

Dubbed the Arlington Archosaur Site, the area is undergoing rapid residential development, and paleontologists have been working with local volunteers and fossil enthusiasts to excavate the site over the past decade.

Crocodile finding
From left, Stephanie Drumheller-Horton, faculty member in UT’s Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences; Thomas Adams of the Witte Museum; and Christopher Noto of the University of Wisconsin-Parkside with the skull elements of the new fossil crocodilian Deltasuchus motherali.

“We simply don’t have that many North American fossils from the middle of the Cretaceous, the last period of the age of dinosaurs, and the eastern half of the continent is particularly poorly understood,” Drumheller-Horton said. “Fossils from the Arlington Archosaur Site are helping fill in this gap, and Deltasuchus is only the first of several new species to be reported from the locality.”

Deltasuchus motherali is named for one of the site volunteers, Austin Motheral, who first uncovered the fossils of this particular crocodile with a small tractor when he was just 15 years old.

Work on the site is supported by a grant from the National Geographic Society, which is funding continued excavations and study of this unique fossil area. Fossils from the site, including the Deltasuchus motherali bones, are part of the collections of the Perot Museum of Nature and Science in Dallas.

Deltasuchus is the first of what may prove to be several new species described from this fossil site. The area preserves a complete ancient ecosystem ranging from 95 million to 100 million years old, and its fossils are important in advancing the understanding of ancient North American land and freshwater ecosystems.

While most of Texas was covered by a shallow sea at the time, the Dallas-Fort Worth area was part of a large peninsula that jutted out from the northeast. The peninsula was a lush environment of river deltas and swamps that teemed with wildlife, including dinosaurs, crocodiles, turtles, mammals, amphibians, fish, invertebrates, and plants.

Media coverage: San Francisco Chronicle, Sept. 13; UPI, Brooks Hays, Sept. 13 (also ran on Breitbart, Newsline, Gephardt Daily, Daily Mail); AP-hosted content on 48 La. and Texas sites including Longview News-Journal and Austin Statesman; Yahoo! News, International Business Times, Martha Henriques, Sept. 14 (mentioned in 217 additional articles); WBIR, Grant Robinson, Sept. 15; CW33, Jennifer Shrum, Sept. 20 (ran in 11 other outlets)

CONTACT:

Lola Alapo, University of Tennessee (865-974-3993, lalapo@utk.edu)

Stephanie Drumheller-Horton, University of Tennessee (865-974-2366, sdrumhel@utk.edu)

Thomas Adams, Witte Museum (210-357-1852, thomasadams@wittemuseum.org)

Christopher Noto, University of Wisconsin–Parkside (262-595-2213, noto@uwp.edu)