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Super Salamander: Bones of 'toilet seat-headed' predator that attacked dinosaurs discovered

The creature walked the earth over 200 million years ago and was discovered on the site of an ancient lake in southern Portugal

Jack Simpson
Tuesday 24 March 2015 09:59 EDT
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Artist's impression of the salamander (PA)
Artist's impression of the salamander (PA) (PA)

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The remains of a “super salamander” thought to be the size of a car and one of the Earth’s top predators 230 million years ago have been discovered in Portugal.

The previously undiscovered species, which is said to be a distant relative of today's salamander species, was found by scientists among a bed of bones on the site of an ancient lake in southern Portugal.

The creature that has been given the name Metoposaurus algarvensis, measured 2 metres in length and fed mostly on fish and other prehistoric creatures.

Dr Brusatte said: ”It was the type of fierce predator that the very first dinosaurs had to put up with if they strayed too close to the water, long before the glory days of T-rex and Brachiosaurus.“

It existed during the late Triassic period, the time in which dinosaurs began to appear across Pangaea, the supercontinent, which was made up of every one of today’s continents.

With only a fraction of the site having been dug so far, it is hoped that more new discoveries can come to light in the coming months.

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