Globidens

Glo-bih-denz.
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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.

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Name

Globidens ‭(‬Globe teeth‭)‬.

Phonetic

Glo-bih-denz.

Named By

Gilmore‭ ‬-‭ ‬1912.

Classification

Chordata,‭ ‬Reptilia,‭ ‬Squamata,‭ ‬Scleroglossa,‭ ‬Mosasauridae,‭ ‬Mosasaurinae,‭ ‬Globidensini.

Diet

Carnivore.

Species

G.‭ ‬alabamaensis‭

Size

6‭ ‬meters long.

Known locations

USA.‭ ‬Africa.

Time Period

Campanian to Maastrichtian of the Cretaceous.

Fossil representation

‭M‬any specimens.

In Depth

       Although Globidens was not the only mosasaur to adapt to a diet of almost exclusively hard shelled animals,‭ ‬it does display perhaps the most specialised teeth.‭ ‬Rather than the sharp conical teeth seen in other mosasaurs such as Tylosaurus and Taniwhasaurus,‭ ‬Globidens had rounded teeth that had a‭ ‘‬globe shaped‭’‬ upper portion of the crown that sat upon a slightly narrower base.‭ ‬An important aspect of the teeth being semispherical rather than conical is that they were much more resilient to impact damage such as chips and cracks.‭ ‬This meant that every time the jaw was moved up and down,‭ ‬each tooth would strike the shell of the prey animal like a ball hammer,‭ ‬cracking up the shell so that Globidens could get at the soft flesh within.‭        Fossil evidence from Prognathodon,‭ ‬a mosasaur with a seemingly similar prey preference proves that turtles and ammonites were readily available as prey.‭ ‬The teeth and strong jaw of Globidens would have allowed it to tackle potentially tougher and more heavily armoured prey than even the larger Prognathodon could handle.‭

       The exact reason why Globidens and other mosasaurs focused more upon shelled animals remains uncertain.‭ ‬It could have been that traditional food sources began to decline resulting in mosasaurs diversifying to reduce the stress of competition between each other for exactly the same food sources.‭ ‬It may of course have been something simpler such as filling an ecological void to take advantage of another food source.‭ ‬Whatever the precise reason,‭ ‬it was a successful adaptation with mosasaurs like Globidens and Prognathodon having broad geological ranges,‭ ‬and a reign that was only cut short by the Cretaceous-Palaeogene extinction.

       One former species of Globidens, G. aegyptiacus has now been re-described as a distinct genus called Igdamanosaurus.

Further Reading

– A new mosasauroid reptile from the Cretaceous of Alabama. – Proceedings of the United States National Museum 41(1870):479-484. – C. W. Gilmore – 1912. – A new species of Globidens from South Dakota, and a review of the globidentine mosasaurs. – Fieldiana Geology 33(13):235-256. – D. A. Russel – 1975. – Durophagous Mosasauridae (Squamata) from the Upper Cretaceous phosphates of Morocco, with description of a new species of Globidens. – Netherlands Journal of Geosciences – Geologie en Mijnbouw 84(3):167-175. – N. Bardet, X. Pereda Suberbiola, M. Iaroch�ne, M. Amalik & B. Bouya – 2005. – A new species of the durophagous mosasaur Globidens (Squamata: Mosasauridae) from the Late Cretaceous Pierre Shale Group of central South Dakota, USA. – Geological Society of America Special Paper 427:177-198. – J. E. Martin – 2007. – Stomach contents of Globidens, a shell-crushing mosasaur (Squamata), from the Late Cretaceous Pierre Shale Group, Big Bend area of the Missouri River, central South Dakota. – Geological Society of America Special Papers, 427:167-176. – – The North African Mosasaur Globidens phosphaticus from the Maastrichtian of Angola. – Historical Biology. 22 (1–3): 175–185. – Michael J. Polcun, Louis L. Jacobs, Anne S. Schulp & Oct�vio Mateus – 2010. J. E. Martin & J. E. Fox – 2007. – Globidens(?) timorensis E. VON HUENE, 1935: not a durophagous mosasaur, but an enigmatic Triassic ichthyosaur. – Neues Jahrbuch f�r Geologie und Pal�ontologie – Abhandlungen. 293 (1): 107–116. – Eric W.A. Mulder & John W.M. Jagt – 2019. – Insights into the anatomy and functional morphology of durophagous mosasaurines (Squamata: Mosasauridae) from a new species of Globidens from Morocco. – Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society. – Aaron LeBlanc, Sydney Mohr & Michael Caldwell – 2019.

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