A New King of the Ancient Seas
Paleontologists have identified a new species of giant mosasaur that stalked the Cretaceous seas 80 million years ago. Named Tylosaurus rex, this marine reptile reached lengths of up to 43 feet (13 meters)—about twice the length of the largest great white sharks. The discovery, published in the Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History on May 21, 2026, reveals one of the largest mosasaurs ever known.
The research, funded by the National Science Foundation and conducted by the American Museum of Natural History, the Perot Museum, and Southern Methodist University, began when AMNH Ph.D. student Amelia Zietlow noticed a fossil mislabeled as Tylosaurus proriger. That specimen, along with more than a dozen others from Texas museums, turned out to belong to a distinct species.
Key differences from T. proriger include greater size, finely serrated teeth (rare in mosasaurs), a younger age (80 vs. 84 million years), and a separate geographic range (Texas vs. Kansas). The new species also exhibits adaptations for exceptionally strong jaws and neck muscles.
The name honors John Thurmond, a Texas paleontologist who in the 1960s first suspected that large tylosaurs from northeast Texas represented a new species, informally called "Tylosaurus thalassotyrannus" or "sea tyrant."
The holotype, nicknamed "The Black Knight," is displayed at the Perot Museum. Discovered in 1979 near Dallas, this 43-foot skeleton bears injuries to its snout and jaw—evidence of violent combat with another T. rex. Such intraspecies fighting is unprecedented among tylosaurs.
Beyond adding a new apex predator to the fossil record, the study highlights a long-ignored problem: the dataset used for mosasaur evolutionary studies had changed little in 30 years. The team has now compiled measurements of 300 mosasaur specimens and 130 modern lizards to create a revised framework. "This discovery is not just about naming a new species," Zietlow said. "It highlights the need to revisit long-standing assumptions about mosasaur evolution."
From Mislabeling to New Species
The identification of Tylosaurus rex emerged from a decade-long reexamination of museum fossils. In 2010, Michael Polcyn of Southern Methodist University received a donated mosasaur from near Dallas that didn't match T. proriger. At the same time, Amelia Zietlow, then a Ph.D. student at the American Museum of Natural History, spotted another misidentified specimen in AMNH's collection. Their collaboration would reveal a hidden giant.
Zietlow spent years visiting collections across Texas, New York, Massachusetts, and Kansas, measuring more than a dozen large specimens. The team compared these fossils with the original T. proriger holotype at Harvard's Museum of Comparative Zoology. The differences were clear.
| Characteristic | T. proriger | T. rex |
|---|---|---|
| Maximum length | ~30 ft (9 m) | 25–43 ft (7.6–13 m) |
| Location | Kansas | Texas |
| Age (Mya) | ~84 | ~80 |
| Tooth edges | Smooth | Finely serrated |
| Skull/neck | Standard | Reinforced for powerful bite |
To rule out growth as an explanation for size, Zietlow measured 130 modern lizard species. The anatomical gaps between T. proriger and the Texas forms did not match changes that occur as lizards age. Combined with the four-million-year temporal separation, the evidence confirmed a new species.
The study also tackled a notorious data problem: the mosasaur phylogenetic matrix had remained virtually unchanged for three decades. The team built a fresh character list based on first-hand observations of 300 specimens and proposed a revised evolutionary tree for tylosaurs. Their work suggests that many prior studies may need to be revisited.
All told, more than a dozen fossils—some discovered decades ago—were reidentified as T. rex. This underscores the value of museum collections and modern analytical methods.
A Predator Built for Violence
Tylosaurus rex combined enormous size, a powerful bite, and serrated teeth to become the apex predator of the Late Cretaceous seas. Its jaw and neck muscle adaptations made it a formidable hunter, capable of taking large fish, sharks, sea turtles, ammonites, and even other marine reptiles.
\"Besides being huge, roughly twice the length of the largest great white sharks, T. rex appeared to be a much meaner animal than other mosasaurs,\" said Ron Tykoski of the Perot Museum. Evidence of intraspecies violence came from a specimen nicknamed \"The Black Knight,\" which is missing the tip of its snout and has a fractured lower jaw—wounds that could only be inflicted by another T. rex of similar size.
Other notable specimens now reassigned to T. rex include:\n
- \n
- Bunker – a massive skeleton at the University of Kansas Natural History Museum, discovered in 1911. \n
- Sophie – exhibited at the Yale Peabody Museum. \n
- Heath Mosasaur – a 31-foot specimen at the Perot Museum. \n
How did T. rex compare to other marine predators?
| Predator | \nLength | \nKey traits | \n
|---|---|---|
| T. rex | \n25–43 ft | \nSerrated teeth, powerful bite, violent behavior | \n
| T. proriger | \n~30 ft | \nSmooth teeth, smaller | \n
| Great white shark | \nUp to 22 ft | \nSerrated teeth, but much smaller | \n
| Saltwater crocodile | \nUp to 23 ft | \nStrong jaws, not fully marine | \n
While not a dinosaur (its closest living relatives are monitor lizards and snakes), T. rex occupied a similar ecological niche as an undisputed apex predator that shaped its environment.
\nThe Ancient Ocean It Called Home
During the Late Cretaceous, central North America was covered by the Western Interior Seaway—a warm, shallow sea stretching from the Gulf of Mexico to the Arctic. This inland ocean spanned over a million square miles and harbored a rich diversity of life: giant fish, ancient sharks, marine reptiles, ammonites, squid, and early sea turtles.
Tylosaurus rex sat atop this food chain. Its large size and powerful jaws allowed it to prey on almost any creature in the ecosystem. The animal’s swimming prowess, driven by a muscular tail and paddle-like limbs, made it both a pursuit hunter and an ambush predator.
The fossils that revealed T. rex were not freshly unearthed; they had languished in museum drawers for decades. The Black Knight specimen was found in 1979; Bunker dates back to 1911. These long-overlooked skeletons finally received a thorough reexamination, proving that even well-known collections can still yield revolutionary discoveries.
The Western Interior Seaway retreated as sea levels fell and the Rocky Mountains rose. Around 66 million years ago, the asteroid impact that ended the dinosaur era also wiped out mosasaurs. Tylosaurus rex may be gone, but its fossils continue to illuminate the grandeur of Cretaceous marine life.
Modern Methods, Revised Data
Identifying Tylosaurus rex required both traditional comparative anatomy and fresh quantitative methods. Zietlow and colleagues visited museums across the country to measure dozens of large Tylosaurus specimens. They compared these fossils with the 1869 T. proriger holotype at Harvard.
Key steps included: direct fossil comparisons, morphometric analysis of skull and jaw features, ontogenetic assessment using 130 modern lizard species to rule out growth effects, and stratigraphic correlation confirming the Texas fossils are 4 million years younger than Kansas specimens.
Perhaps most importantly, the team discovered that the standard mosasaur phylogenetic matrix had changed little in three decades. They built a new character list from first-hand measurements of 300 specimens and proposed a revised evolutionary framework for tylosaurs. Their results imply that many previous studies need to be revisited.
| Nickname | Institution | Length | Discovery Year | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| The Black Knight | Perot Museum | ~43 ft | 1979 | Combat injuries to snout and jaw |
| Bunker | Univ. of Kansas | massive | 1911 | One of the largest known |
| Sophie | Yale Peabody Museum | enormous | Unknown | Well-preserved skull |
| Heath Mosasaur | Perot Museum | 31 ft | Unknown | Often displayed alongside T. rex |
Funding came from the National Science Foundation (Grant #1938103), the Dallas Paleontological Society, the Society of Systematic Biologists, the Richard Gilder Graduate School, the Gingrich Fund, and the Carter Fund. Their support enabled the extensive travel and imaging needed to bring these historical specimens into the digital age.
The article, with supplementary data and 3D models, is available via DOI: 10.1206/0003-0090.482.1.1. It is expected to reshape mosasaur paleontology for years to come.
Conclusion: A Sea Tyrant for the Ages
The discovery of Tylosaurus rex reminds us that even well-studied museum collections can still hide new species. This 43-foot mosasaur, with its serrated teeth and powerful jaws, was an apex predator that ruled the Late Cretaceous seas. Evidence of intraspecies violence—seen in the injured Black Knight specimen—suggests a level of aggression unmatched among its relatives.
The research, led by Amelia Zietlow, Ron Tykoski, and Michael Polcyn, also exposed a serious issue in mosasaur studies: the core phylogenetic dataset had barely changed in 30 years. By measuring 300 specimens and 130 modern lizards, the team provided a much-needed update. \"This discovery is not just about naming a new species,\" Zietlow said. \"It highlights the need to revisit long-standing assumptions about mosasaur evolution.\"
The new species honors John Thurmond, who in the 1960s first suspected the Texas tylosaurs were distinct. His informal \"sea tyrant\" now has a formal name.
As the Cretaceous seas vanished, mosasaurs disappeared with the non-avian dinosaurs. Yet each fossil discovery like this one adds a piece to the puzzle of Earth's deep history, revealing the scale and drama of life that once dominated the oceans.
This article was generated by AI based on research from multiple sources. While efforts are made to ensure accuracy, readers should verify information independently.
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