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  3. 'Drop Crocs' hunted prehistoric Australia

'Drop Crocs' hunted prehistoric Australia

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  • neutronbumblebee@mander.xyzN This user is from outside of this forum
    neutronbumblebee@mander.xyzN This user is from outside of this forum
    neutronbumblebee@mander.xyz
    wrote last edited by neutronbumblebee@mander.xyz
    #1

    Unlike modern crocodiles, which mostly lurk in rivers and swamps, mekosuchines were an extraordinarily diverse and adaptable group. They filled ecological roles unlike any reptiles alive today. Some species were small and land-dwelling, while others may have hunted in forests rather than waterways.

    UNSW paleontologist Professor Michael Archer describes them with a kind of gleeful disbelief. “It’s a bizarre idea,” he says, “but some of them appear to have been terrestrial hunters in the forests.”

    Even more astonishing are the “drop crocs”—semi-arboreal species that, according to fossil evidence, may have climbed trees and leapt down on unsuspecting prey below. Archer likens them to reptilian leopards. “They were perhaps hunting like big cats—dropping out of trees on any unsuspecting thing they fancied for dinner,” he says.

    Such behavior challenges our assumptions about crocodiles, painting a picture of ancient ecosystems filled with agile, cunning predators unlike anything in Australia today.

    Via BBC news

    Illustration from Science News

    Em AdespotonA W 2 Replies Last reply
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    • ScienceS Science shared this topic
    • neutronbumblebee@mander.xyzN neutronbumblebee@mander.xyz

      Unlike modern crocodiles, which mostly lurk in rivers and swamps, mekosuchines were an extraordinarily diverse and adaptable group. They filled ecological roles unlike any reptiles alive today. Some species were small and land-dwelling, while others may have hunted in forests rather than waterways.

      UNSW paleontologist Professor Michael Archer describes them with a kind of gleeful disbelief. “It’s a bizarre idea,” he says, “but some of them appear to have been terrestrial hunters in the forests.”

      Even more astonishing are the “drop crocs”—semi-arboreal species that, according to fossil evidence, may have climbed trees and leapt down on unsuspecting prey below. Archer likens them to reptilian leopards. “They were perhaps hunting like big cats—dropping out of trees on any unsuspecting thing they fancied for dinner,” he says.

      Such behavior challenges our assumptions about crocodiles, painting a picture of ancient ecosystems filled with agile, cunning predators unlike anything in Australia today.

      Via BBC news

      Illustration from Science News

      Em AdespotonA This user is from outside of this forum
      Em AdespotonA This user is from outside of this forum
      Em Adespoton
      wrote last edited by
      #2

      We’re getting closer to discovering dropbears actually existed outside the stories told to tourists….

      jimmux@programming.devJ 1 Reply Last reply
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      • Em AdespotonA Em Adespoton

        We’re getting closer to discovering dropbears actually existed outside the stories told to tourists….

        jimmux@programming.devJ This user is from outside of this forum
        jimmux@programming.devJ This user is from outside of this forum
        jimmux@programming.dev
        wrote last edited by
        #3

        Of course they exist. It’s just that official accounts are rare because they never leave witnesses.

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • neutronbumblebee@mander.xyzN neutronbumblebee@mander.xyz

          Unlike modern crocodiles, which mostly lurk in rivers and swamps, mekosuchines were an extraordinarily diverse and adaptable group. They filled ecological roles unlike any reptiles alive today. Some species were small and land-dwelling, while others may have hunted in forests rather than waterways.

          UNSW paleontologist Professor Michael Archer describes them with a kind of gleeful disbelief. “It’s a bizarre idea,” he says, “but some of them appear to have been terrestrial hunters in the forests.”

          Even more astonishing are the “drop crocs”—semi-arboreal species that, according to fossil evidence, may have climbed trees and leapt down on unsuspecting prey below. Archer likens them to reptilian leopards. “They were perhaps hunting like big cats—dropping out of trees on any unsuspecting thing they fancied for dinner,” he says.

          Such behavior challenges our assumptions about crocodiles, painting a picture of ancient ecosystems filled with agile, cunning predators unlike anything in Australia today.

          Via BBC news

          Illustration from Science News

          W This user is from outside of this forum
          W This user is from outside of this forum
          wolf314159@startrek.website
          wrote last edited by
          #4

          What’s up with the ridiculous AI slop picture? It seems to have little to do with the article. It absolutely does not depict what a gator or crocodile nest looks like or would have likely ever looked like. Not how those kinds of nests by cold blooded creatures work. I can only assume the rest of the article is similarly meaningless AI slop too.

          I guess the BBC is doing lazy AI slop now. Cool.

          neutronbumblebee@mander.xyzN 1 Reply Last reply
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          • W wolf314159@startrek.website

            What’s up with the ridiculous AI slop picture? It seems to have little to do with the article. It absolutely does not depict what a gator or crocodile nest looks like or would have likely ever looked like. Not how those kinds of nests by cold blooded creatures work. I can only assume the rest of the article is similarly meaningless AI slop too.

            I guess the BBC is doing lazy AI slop now. Cool.

            neutronbumblebee@mander.xyzN This user is from outside of this forum
            neutronbumblebee@mander.xyzN This user is from outside of this forum
            neutronbumblebee@mander.xyz
            wrote last edited by neutronbumblebee@mander.xyz
            #5

            I’ve updated the Illustration.

            Seems like they got it straight from the university press release here. I guess we can cut them some slack for using a bit of AI given the recent job losses at that university. They are reported to have lost around 4000 full time staff places in the last year, part of Australia’s recent cut backs to universities that don’t get much international reporting. That’s may hurt their ability to do quality research. Professor Archer noted that "quite clearly, from the many fascinating animals that we’ve already found in this deposit since 1983, we know that with more digging there will be a lot more surprises to come,”. So lets hope they continue to get support.

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