homehome Home chatchat Notifications


The Sahara used to be the "most dangerous place on Earth"

The authors call it "a place where a human time-traveller would not last very long."

Alexandru Micu
April 28, 2020 @ 8:51 pm

share Share

Around 100 million years ago, the Sahara was teeming with ferocious predators on land, through the skies, and in its waterways.

Image credits Nizar Ibrahim et al., (2020), ZooKeys.

The findings come from a review of the fossil vertebrates found in Cretaceous rock formations (the Kem Kem Group) in south-eastern Morocco. The authors explain that this is the largest most inclusive review on the subject performed on the topic in the last century and provides a unique view into the dinosaur species that roamed Africa.

Toothy times

“This was arguably the most dangerous place in the history of planet Earth, a place where a human time-traveller would not last very long,” says lead author Dr. Nizar Ibrahim, an Assistant Professor of Biology at the University of Detroit Mercy and Visiting Researcher from the University of Portsmouth.

The Sahara wasn’t always a wind-swept desert. Around 100 million years ago, before the dinosaurs discovered meteorites, the area was actually pretty lush. The team explains that a vast river system irrigated the land, and a great variety of land and aquatic species made a home here.

Fossils recovered from the Kem Kem Group (which consists of two distinct formations, the Gara Sbaa Formation and the Douira Formation) include three of the largest species of predatory dinosaurs ever found, the team explains, such as the saber-toothed Carcharodontosaurus (which grew to over 8m in length and sported serrated teeth up to eight inches long), Deltadromeus (a raptor species that grew to around 8m in length), several species of carnivorous, flying pterosaurs, and crocodile-like stalkers.

According to co-author David Martill, a professor at the University of Portsmouth, the area’s bountiful populations of huge fish helped feed the wealth of predators.

“This place was filled with absolutely enormous fish, including giant coelacanths and lungfish. The coelacanth, for example, is probably four or even five times large than today’s coelacanth. There is an enormous freshwater saw shark called Onchopristis with the most fearsome of rostral teeth, they are like barbed daggers, but beautifully shiny.”

The paper “Geology and paleontology of the Upper Cretaceous Kem Kem Group of eastern Morocco” has been published in the journal ZooKeys.

share Share

How Bees Use the Sun for Navigation Even on Cloudy Days

Bees see differently than humans, for them the sky is more than just blue.

Scientists Quietly Developed a 6G Chip Capable of 100 Gbps Speeds

A single photonic chip for all future wireless communication.

When Ice Gets Bent, It Sparks: A Surprising Source of Electricity in Nature’s Coldest Corners

Ice isn't as passive as it looks.

This Teen Scientist Turned a $0.50 Bar of Soap Into a Cancer-Fighting Breakthrough and Became ‘America’s Top Young Scientist’

Heman's inspiration for his invention came from his childhood in Ethiopia, where he witnessed the dangers of prolonged sun exposure.

We can still easily get AI to say all sorts of dangerous things

Jailbreaking an AI is still an easy task.

Pluto's Moons and Everything You Didn't Know You Want to Know About Them

Let's get acquainted with the lesser known but still very interesting moons of Pluto.

Japan Is Starting to Use Robots in 7-Eleven Shops to Compensate for the Massive Shortage of Workers

These robots are taking over repetitive jobs and reducing workload as Japan combats a worker crisis.

This Bizarre Martian Rock Formation Is Our Strongest Evidence Yet for Ancient Life on Mars

We can't confirm it yet, but it's as close as it gets.

A small, portable test could revolutionize how we diagnose Alzheimer's

A passive EEG scan could spot memory loss before symptoms begin to show.

Scientists Solved a Key Mystery Regarding the Evolution of Life on Earth

A new study brings scientists closer to uncovering how life began on Earth.