Kaprosuchus
Kaprosuchus was a crocodile relative from the Middle Cretaceous Period (around 100 million years ago) with tusks resembling that of a boar.
Classification: Reptilia, Pseudosuchia, Crocodylomopha, Mahajangasuchidae
Genus: Kaprosuchus (“Boar Crocodile”)
Species: K. saharicus
Unlike modern alligators and crocodiles that spend much of their time in water, Kaprosuchus was thought to be more suited to life on land. The eyes in its skull are more forward facing than modern crocs, indicating it had a better depth perception than today’s crocodilians. However, its snout still featured nostrils that allowed it to be used like a “snorkel”, hinting that it still may have spent some time in the water.
Kaprosuchus was a meat-eater, and its forward-facing eyes point to it being a capable hunter. Its well armored snout may have been used for ramming prey, while its prominent tusks produced a powerful bite.
Kaprosuchus is known only from a mostly complete skull, which features boar-like tusks and projecting horns behind its eyes. From this skull, as well as bones from closely related animals, scientists were able to draw some conclusions about how the rest of Kaprosuchus might have looked.
Since it believed to have been largely a land-based animal, Kaprosuchus is thought to have had a more upright posture than modern crocodiles, with its limbs pointing straighter toward the ground rather than sprawling out to the side.
Length: 6 m (20 ft)
Weight: 907 kg (2,000 pounds)
Kaprosuchus was discovered in the country of Niger in Africa, and was formally described by the paleontologists Paul Sereno and Hans Larsson in 2009.