Liopleurodon
Liopleurodon was a predatory prehistoric marine reptile that lived in the Jurassic Period, around 160 million years ago.
Classification: Reptilia, Sauropterygia, Plesiosauria, Pliosauridae.
Genus: Liopleurodon (“Smooth-sided Tooth”)
Species: L. ferox
Liopleurodon was a meat-eater, a predator that may have preyed upon squids, fish, and other prehistoric marine reptiles.
Liopleurodon was a plesiosaur, specifically a pliosaur – the short-necked variety of plesiosaur that included Kronosaurus (which lived much later and grew much larger than Liopleurodon).
Like other pliosaurs, it had a large head full of sharp teeth, four paddle-shaped flippers that it used for swimming, and a compact but streamlined body with a short tail.
Length: 6.6 meters (22 feet)
The first Liopleurodon remains discovered were very fragmentary, consisting mainly of teeth and other scattered bones. However, Alfred Leeds and his brother Charles, two amateur paleontologists, would eventually uncover many more bones, including skulls and much of the remaining skeleton.
Liopleurodon rose in popularity after being featured in the BBC television series Walking with Dinosaurs. However, the Liopleurodon featured in this program was incorrectly portrayed as much larger than the real life animal.
References
https://plesiosauria.com/directory/genera/liopleurodon/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liopleurodon
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