The world's most complete lower jaw bone of an ancient marine predator has been found in outback Queensland. The 1.6-metre long mandible of a Kronosaurus queenslandicus is thought to be more than 100 ...
A world-famous specimen of a prehistoric marine reptile named after Queensland has sat at Harvard University in the United States for about 90 years. Harvard University has the world’s only mounted ...
The jaws of the Kronosaurus skeleton — each of them longer than a human is tall — hang agape in a menacing bite, practically taunting any visitor who dares to approach its glass case in the Harvard ...
More than 100 million years ago, prehistoric animals, some of whom resembled land-dwelling dinosaurs, lived in the depths of the ocean. One of them, the Kronosaurus, was about 30 feet long and weighed ...
The Kronosaurus was a massive marine predator with a fearsome jaw, big enough to swallow an adult human whole. They had huge teeth — about 12 inches long from the base to the tip, which they used to ...
An Australian farmer was stunned to stumble across the remains of a 100-million-year-old “monster of the sea” while tending his land. Robert Hacon was poisoning prickly acacia on his farm near Neila ...
HAD YOU BEEN AROUND in outback Australia 100 million years ago, you would not have wanted to go for a swim in the Eromanga Sea. Today we are right to be wary of saltwater crocodiles at Top End ...
Kronosaurus queenslandicus, a massive marine reptile, dominated the Eromanga Sea millions of years ago. Its powerful jaws, with a bite force exceeding that of modern crocodiles, crushed shells and ...
For one of the most impressive seagoing predators of all time, Kronosaurus queenslandicus did not receive a very auspicious introduction in the scientific literature. Today the creature’s name ...