Desert Titan Rewrites Spinosaurus Story: 40-Foot Predator Hunted in Sahara Shallows

Paleontologists describe Spinosaurus mirabilis, a roughly 40-foot carnivorous dinosaur from Niger’s Sahara dating to about 95 million years ago, with a distinctive 20-inch skull crest and a jaw setup optimized for catching fish. Found at the Jenguebi site, about 300–600 miles from the nearest ancient shoreline, the fossils suggest a shallow-water, ambush-hunting lifestyle rather than a fully aquatic marine predator, challenging long-held views of Spinosaurus and implying the genus included both inland waders and possible aquatic specialists. This discovery marks the second species in the Spinosaurus genus and underscores a more versatile, environment-spanning lifestyle for these dinosaurs.
- Scientists Unearth a Massive 40-Foot 'Hell Heron' Dinosaur That Hunted in Sahara Shallows Far from the Sea Indian Defence Review
- Newly discovered dinosaur species was a fish-eater with a huge horn NPR
- Newly discovered horned dinosaur was like a unicorn from hell Scientific American
- ‘Hell-heron’ dinosaur discovered in the central Sahara The University of Chicago
- New sabre-crested Spinosaurus species named from desert dinosaur fossils Natural History Museum
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