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Saturday, June 7, 2025

This ancient snake in India might have been longer than a school bus and weighed a ton

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413 days ago
20240419
This image provided by researchers in April 2024 shows views of some of the vertebrae of Vasuki indicus, a newly discovered extinct snake from about 47 million years ago, estimated to reach nearly 50 feet (15 meters) long. The scale bar at the center of each row showing rotated views of an individual vertebra indicates 5 centimeters (almost 2 inches). (Sunil Bajpai, Debajit Datta, Poonam Verma via AP)

This image provided by researchers in April 2024 shows views of some of the vertebrae of Vasuki indicus, a newly discovered extinct snake from about 47 million years ago, estimated to reach nearly 50 feet (15 meters) long. The scale bar at the center of each row showing rotated views of an individual vertebra indicates 5 centimeters (almost 2 inches). (Sunil Bajpai, Debajit Datta, Poonam Verma via AP)

An an­cient gi­ant snake in In­dia might have been longer than a school bus and weighed a ton, re­searchers re­port­ed Thurs­day.

Fos­sils found near a coal mine re­vealed a snake that stretched an es­ti­mat­ed 36 feet (11 me­ters) to 50 feet (15 me­ters). It’s com­pa­ra­ble to the largest known snake at about 42 feet (13 me­ters) that once lived in what is now Colom­bia.

The largest liv­ing snake to­day is Asia’s retic­u­lat­ed python at 33 feet (10 me­ters).

The new­ly dis­cov­ered be­he­moth lived 47 mil­lion years ago in west­ern In­dia’s swampy ever­green forests. It could have weighed up to 2,200 pounds (1,000 kilo­grams), re­searchers said in the jour­nal Sci­en­tif­ic Re­ports.

They gave it the name Va­su­ki in­di­cus af­ter “the myth­i­cal snake king Va­su­ki, who wraps around the neck of the Hin­du de­ity Shi­va,” said De­ba­jit Dat­ta, a study co-au­thor at the In­di­an In­sti­tute of Tech­nol­o­gy Roor­kee.

This mon­ster snake wasn’t es­pe­cial­ly swift to strike.

“Con­sid­er­ing its large size, Va­su­ki was a slow-mov­ing am­bush preda­tor that would sub­due its prey through con­stric­tion,” Dat­ta said in an email.

AP Wash­ing­ton cor­re­spon­dent Sagar Meghani re­ports on the re­mains of an an­cient snake that may have been longer than a school bus.

Frag­ments of the snake’s back­bone were dis­cov­ered in 2005 by co-au­thor Sunil Ba­j­pai, based at the same in­sti­tute, near Kutch, Gu­jarat, in west­ern In­dia. The re­searchers com­pared more than 20 fos­sil ver­te­brae to skele­tons of liv­ing snakes to es­ti­mate size.

While it’s not clear ex­act­ly what Va­su­ki ate, oth­er fos­sils found near­by re­veal that the snake lived in swampy ar­eas along­side cat­fish, tur­tles, croc­o­diles and prim­i­tive whales, which may have been its prey, Dat­ta said.

The oth­er ex­tinct gi­ant snake, Ti­tanoboa, was dis­cov­ered in Colom­bia and is es­ti­mat­ed to have lived around 60 mil­lion years ago.

What these two mon­ster snakes have in com­mon is that they lived dur­ing pe­ri­ods of ex­cep­tion­al­ly warm glob­al cli­mates, said Ja­son Head, a Cam­bridge Uni­ver­si­ty palaeon­tol­o­gist who was not in­volved in the study.

“These snakes are gi­ant cold-blood­ed an­i­mals,” he said. “A snake re­quires high­er tem­per­a­tures” to grow in­to large sizes.

So does that mean that glob­al warm­ing will bring back mon­ster-sized snakes?

In the­o­ry, it’s pos­si­ble. But the cli­mate is now warm­ing too quick­ly for snakes to evolve again to be gi­ants, he said.

The As­so­ci­at­ed Press Health and Sci­ence De­part­ment re­ceives sup­port from the Howard Hugh­es Med­ical In­sti­tute’s Sci­ence and Ed­u­ca­tion­al Me­dia Group and the Robert Wood John­son Foun­da­tion. The AP is sole­ly re­spon­si­ble for all con­tent.

BY CHRISTI­NA LAR­SON

WASH­ING­TON (AP) 

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