Xenodens

Ze-no-denz.
Published on

Benjamin Gutierrez

Vertebrate Paleontologist

Benjamin Gutierrez is a leading expert on dinosaurs, particularly the mighty theropods. His fieldwork in South America has uncovered new species and provided insights into dinosaur social structures.

Cite Feedback Print

Name

Xenodens ‭(‬strange tooth‭)‬.

Phonetic

Ze-no-denz.

Named By

Nicholas R.Longrich,‭ ‬NathalieBardet,‭ ‬Anne S.Schulp‭ & ‬Nour-Eddine Jalil‭ ‬-‭ ‬2021.

Classification

Chordata,‭ ‬Reptilia,‭ ‬Squamata,‭ ‬Mosasauroidea,‭ ‬Mosasauridae,‭ ‬Mosasaurinae,‭ ‬Mosasaurini.

Diet

Carnivore/Piscivore/Durophagus‭?

Species

X.‭ ‬calminechari‭

Size

Uncertain due to lack of remains,‭ ‬but holotype individual roughly estimated to have been about‭ ‬1.6‭ ‬meters long.

Known locations

Morocco‭ ‬-‭ ‬Ouled Abdoun Basin.

Time Period

Late Maastrichtian of the Cretaceous.

Fossil representation

Partial maxilla.

In Depth

       Though first described from a partial maxilla,‭ ‬the mosasaur Xenodens seems to have had very specialised teeth.‭ ‬These teeth are individually short and flattened into stout blade-like form,‭ ‬but when in the jaw,‭ ‬are tightly packed together to form what can only be described as a saw blade-like structure.‭ ‬Indeed,‭ ‬the type species name‭ ‘‬calminechari‭’‬,‭ ‬is derived from the Arabic for‭ ‘‬like a saw‭’‬.‭ ‬Tooth‭ ‬arrangement like this is not typically seem in tetrapod animals,‭ ‬but is seem in some fish such as certain piranhas and especially in dogfish sharks.‭

       This tooth arrangement meant that Xenodens could have feasibly tackled a variety of prey animals from fish and squid,‭ ‬to shelled creatures such as crustaceans to possibly even scavenging the bodies of other creatures.‭ ‬Xenodens‭ ‬may have just as easily been a generalist feeder as a specialist one. Further reading

-‭ ‬Xenodens calminechari gen.‭ ‬et sp.‭ ‬nov.,‭ ‬a bizarre mosasaurid‭ (‬Mosasauridae,‭ ‬Squamata‭) ‬with shark-like cutting teeth from the upper Maastrichtian of Morocco,‭ ‬North Africa.‭ ‬-‭ ‬Cretaceous Research.‭ ‬-‭ ‬Nicholas R.Longrich,‭ ‬NathalieBardet,‭ ‬Anne S.Schulp‭ & ‬Nour-Eddine Jalil‭ ‬-‭ ‬2021.

Adopt A Species
prehistoric-wildlife new logo

Love this species?

Adopt it today!

(UPDATED!)

SPECIES SPOTLIGHT

tyrannosaurus illustration