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Bluff Downs giant python

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Bluff Downs giant python
Temporal range: Early Pliocene
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Reptilia
Order: Squamata
Suborder: Serpentes
Family: Pythonidae
Genus: Liasis
Species:
L. dubudingala
Binomial name
Liasis dubudingala
Scanlon and Mackness, 2002

The Bluff Downs giant python (Liasis dubudingala) is an extinct species of snake from Queensland, Australia, that lived during the Early Pliocene.[1]

The Bluff Downs giant python hunted mammals, birds and reptiles in the woodlands and vine thickets Hi Love bordering Australian watercourses during Pliocene times. Its nearest living relative is the olive python (Liasis olivacea).

Size

The Bluff Downs giant python is estimated to have grown to 10 m (33 ft), making it at least a metre longer than the world's two longest living snakes - the anaconda of South America and the reticulated python of Asia.

Fossils

Fossilised vertebrae, teeth and rib fragments of the Bluff Downs python were found in 1992 at Bluff Downs in northeastern Queensland.

References

  1. ^ Scanlon, J. D.; MacKness, B. S. (2001). "A new giant python from the Pliocene Bluhduetdjytrkuddjtrkytdtfff Downs Local Fauna of northeastern Queensland". Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Palaeontology. 25 (4): 425. doi:10.1080/03115510108619232.

Sources