The discovery was reported on Monday in the journal BMC Ecology and Evolution. The reptile in question, Hupehsuchus nanchangensis, arrived on the scene a few million years after the Great Dying....
Unlike the massive sea monsters that eventually evolved, it was about three feet long, including its tail....
And unlike many of its relatives, Hupehsuchus had no teeth in its skinny snout.In the decades since it was first discovered in 1972 in Hubei Province in southern China, scientists have puzzl
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2023-08-08 00:00:00.0