| |

|
Dakota Datebook
April 27, 2004
"Mosasaurs"
|
|
Today were bringing you a glimpse of what our
state was like before humans came. On this day, 75 million years ago,
the area around Cooperstown was under salt water.
Actually, a shallow, sub-tropical sea covered almost
the entire state. The Pierre Sea was part of the Western Interior Seaway,
which divided the North American continent right down the center, connecting
the Arctic Ocean with the Gulf of Mexico.
But back to Cooperstown 75 million years ago. On a typical
day, sand-tiger sharks, dogfish sharks, and two types of cow sharks were
trying to out-lunch each other. Since both types of cow sharks
are now extinct, a person could surmise that one of the other types was
winning.
The water in that area was only about 100 yards deep,
and the sharks entrees included numerous types of bony fish, including
the salmon-like Enchodus. Down on the seabed, coral and different types
of seaweed were sheltering snails, tusk shells, clams, starfish, sea urchins,
shrimp, crabs and lobsters.
There were also cephalopods, which include creatures
like the octopus, squid and the chambered nautilus. Its the cephalopods
that give away the time period, which was Campanian; some refer to it
as the golden age of the duckbilled dinosaurs.
On the seas surface were turtles and hesperornithids. That last
one was a seabird that couldnt fly. At 6_ feet tall, it had powerful
legs similar to the modern loon. It also had teeth.
Now we get to one of the creepier predators: the carnivorous
mosasaur. These marine reptiles lived during the same time as the dinosaurs,
but theyre in a different classification more closely related to
monitor lizards, like the Komodo dragons of Indonesia. Mosasaurs had powerful
toothy jaws like those of alligators and crocodiles, but they didnt
have legs. They had flippers, and they propelled through coastal waters
in the same way a snake moves.
Mike Hanson and Dennis Halvorson of Cooperstown found
the jaw of a mosasaur in the Sheyenne River valley around 1993, and John
Hoganson, of the North Dakota Geological Survey, came out to investigate.
To make a long story short, at least 12 mosasaurs have now been found
in that area. Two separate species were identified, but there was one
that was different.
The unusual one was found on Beverly and Orville Tranbys
property, and it was almost completely intact. To their great credit,
the Tranbys, as well as Bevs sisters, donated it to the State Fossil
Collection for further study. The entire skeleton turned out to be 23
feet long, with the skull alone being 3 feet. The specimen was identified
as a type of Plioplatecarpus, but its unusually large size and unique
bone structure revealed it to be a new species not found anywhere else
in the world. Some of its bones had tooth marks, and thousands of dogfish
shark teeth found with the skeleton paint a pretty clear picture of the
lizards last moments: sharks lose a lot of teeth when theyre
attacking and feeding.
After two years of intensive restoration, this one-of-a-kind
mosasaur is now suspended in mid-air in the impressive Corridor of Time
display at the Heritage Center in Bismarck. The restoration was funded
only through private donations and volunteer help, so were fortunate
that it happened at all. To learn more, go to the website for the ND Geological
Survey. And remember
do something good for the earth today and always.
This text and audio may not be copied without securing
prior permission from North Dakota Public Radio.
|