― David Attenborough, Islands
Prognathodon[DN 1] (Forejaw Tooth), simply referred to as "a huge mosasaur" on the show, is a genus of mosasaur that lived 83.6 - 66 million years ago, during the Campanian and Maastrichtian stage of the Late Cretaceous Period. While it is known from North America, Africa, Europe, the Middle East, and even New Zealand, the segment depicting it takes place somewhere in Southern Europe during the Maastrichtian stage of the Late Cretaceous Period, with the setting, along with its large size, indicating that it may be P. giganteus of Belgium or P. saturator of the Netherlands, with both being known from fossils dated to the Maastrichtian stage, 72 - 66 million years ago.
Paleobiology[]
Similar to its relative, Mosasaurus, Prognathodon is a heavily-built mosasaur with robust jaws and teeth (which are fewer compared to those of other mosasaurs). Some of the larger species, like P. giganteus (Maastrichtian, Belgium, Jordan and Syria), P. lutugini (Late Campanian, Ukraine) and P. waiparaensis (Maastrichtian, New Zealand), could reach a body length of 10 - 11 meters (33 - 36 feet), while the largest species, P. saturator (Maastrichtian, the Netherlands), could reach a length of 12 meters (40 feet).[1][2] It is believed that Prognathodon has a proportionally stronger bite than even Mosasaurus.
Paleoecology[]
Paleoenvironment[]
Main: Tethys Ocean
Main: Tethys Ocean
Two large species of Prognathodon (P. giganteus and P. saturator) are known from the Tethys Ocean, which covered most of Europe (the setting of the segment where Prognathodon appears in) from the Late Triassic Period (230 million years ago) to the Early Eocene (50 million years ago), millions of years after mosasaurs and various other life forms (most notably other large marine reptiles, pterosaurs, and non-avian dinosaurs) went extinct.
Hunting Tactics and Feeding Preferences[]
As shown in its brief appearance, Prognathodon is an opportunistic predator, willing to go after small, defenseless prey, even animals smaller than a human like Alcione and Zalmoxes. Even though these are barely big enough to fully satiate its hunger, the massive predator seems to content to simply snatch any vulnerable meal within its reach, much like the Mosasaurus in Coasts, which chased and caught just a single juvenile T. rex because it is the easiest prey to go after at the moment.
Appearance[]
― David Attenborough, Islands
In the first segment of Islands, a Prognathodon tries to ambush an adult Alcione on a drifting piece of land, only for the pterosaur to fly off at the last second. The mosasaur then turns its attention to another raft carrying a more vulnerable target, Zalmoxes. The ornithopod dinosaur abandons its raft and swims for a larger, drifting island, managing to climb to safety and escape the Prognathodon in the end.
Trivia[]
- Prognathodon is the fourth animal featured on Prehistoric Planet that was named outside of the actual show, with its identity being confirmed by Dr. Darren Naish, Prehistoric Planet's lead consultant.[DN 1] It was only referred to as "a huge mosasaur" in its sole appearance in the first segment of Islands.
- It was predeced by Dromaeosaurus,[DN 2] Cimolodon,[DN 3] and Anodontosaurus,[DN 4] and followed by Pachycephalosaurus.[DN 5][DN 6]
References[]
General[]
Dr. Darren Naish[]
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 The mosasaur in the first segment of Islands is Prognathodon.
- ↑ The dromaeosaur in the first segment of Ice Worlds is based on Dromaeosaurus specifically, though it can be envisioned as any of the other dromaeosaurs known from the far north of America.
- ↑ The small mammal in the fourth segment of Ice Worlds is Cimolodon.
- ↑ Many animals today eat charcoal as a nutritional supplement and toxin neutralizer, which is what the ankylosaur, Anodontosaurus, does in Forests.
- ↑ Prehistoric Planet's Pachycephalosaurus is based on the Sandy specimen, and its taxonomy is still not sorted out.
- ↑ Regardless of whether they are a separate species or not, the spike-crowned Pachycephalosauruses are depicted as a distinct population, given how they are found in a rock layer different from that of the non-spiked variants.
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Marine Reptiles and Birds | |
Mosasaurs |
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Plesiosaurs | |
Others | |
Other Marine Life | |
Ammonites | |
Fish |
Fauna by Area | |
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Africa | |
Madagascar | |
Morocco | |
America, North | |
Alberta, Canada |
Horseshoe Canyon Formation |
Scollard Formation | |
United States |
Hell Creek and Lance Formations |
Javelina Formation | |
Prince Creek Formation | |
Western Interior Seaway |
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America, South | |
Argentina | |
Brazil | |
Others | |
Antarctica | |
López de Bertodano Formation |
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Snow Hill Island Formation |
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Asia | |
China | Nanxiong Formation |
Songliao Basin | |
India | |
Japan | |
Mongolia | Barun Goyot Formation |
Nemegt Formation | |
Russia | |
Europe | |
Hațeg Island |
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Tethys Ocean |
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Others | |
Oceania | |
New Zealand |
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