02-02-2019, 02:46 AM
(This post was last modified: 06-22-2021, 02:00 PM by SameerluvAnimals.)
(01-30-2019, 04:25 PM)Catherine Wrote: From where I was standing the mastodon and the mammoth both looked enormous. If I got another chance to see them I would observe more. On that trip I let myself feel the presence of the creatures and experience their size. I wasn't expecting to see the skeletons either. I was on a different trip with friends and I took a side trip by myself to see the tar pits and the museum. It was worth the whole trip just to see the mammoth and the mastodon.
The Liopleurodon was a serious looking predator. It must have been able to swallow a fairly large prey animal. The oceans were a dangerous place in prehistoric times.
I have heard of the thresher shark. Is there a smaller version that is alive today or are they all extinct.
You can compare the mammoth and mastodon skeleton from internet pictures too. There are 3 types of small thresher sharks alive today. Common thresher, big eye thresher and pelagic thresher.
Carcharocles chubutensis is considered to be a close relative of the megatoothed shark megalodon. It is one of the largest sharks to have existed, reaching 12 m (40 ft) in length.
Fossils have been found in Africa, Europe, North America, South America, Cuba and Puerto Rico.