This complete crocodile lower jaw, belongs to Euthecodon brumpti, a large slender snouted fish eating crocodile, that was common in the lakes and rivers of Lake Turkana between 1 and 8 million years ago. The skull specimen KNMER 757 a was associated and belonged to this same individual. Euthecodon brumpti was one of the most common crocodiles in the Turkna Basin, however it is now extinct. A particularly large specimen of this crocodile found at Lothagam on the west side of Lake Turkana dated to some 4 million years, was estimated to have been almost 10 meters in length. It looks similar however it is not related to the modern day gharial crocodiles. It has distinctive sharp and slender teeth with a rounded and enlarged nostrum.
Euthecodon brumpti
Euthecodon mandible Age approx. 1.60 Million Years
Digital Capture: Structured Light Scanner ER 70 FS 53 0 Comments Order: Crocodylia Family: Crocodylidae Genus: Euthecodon Species: brumpti Element: Mandible Locality: Area 103, East Turkana Year of Discovery: 1970 Other Fossils to View |