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Archelon

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Kingdom
  
Animalia

Order
  
Testudines

Clade
  
Americhelydia

Scientific name
  
Archelon

Rank
  
Genus

Phylum
  
Chordata

Suborder
  
Cryptodira

Family
  
†Protostegidae

Higher classification
  
Protostegidae

Archelon Archelon

Similar
  
Turtle, Sea turtle, Loggerhead sea turtle, Reptile, Tylosaurus

Archelon lakonikos bay sea turtle conservation project greece


Archelon (from Greek αρχελών meaning ruler turtle) is a genus of extinct sea turtles, the largest genus of sea turtles that has ever been documented, and the second-heaviest turtles documented behind Stupendemys.

Contents

Archelon Archelon Prehistoric Planet

Archelon at a glimpse


Discovery

Archelon Carbonemys Vs Archelon Who Would Win The Archelon Was The Largest

The first specimen of Archelon (YPM 3000) was collected from the Campanian-age Pierre Shale of South Dakota (a geological formation dated to 80.5 million years ago) by Dr. G.R. Wieland in 1895 and described by him the following year (Wieland, 1896). The largest Archelon fossil, found in the Pierre Shale of South Dakota in the 1970s, measures more than 4 metres (13 ft) long, and about 4.9 metres (16 ft) wide from flipper to flipper. It was a marine turtle, whose closest living relative in the present day is the leatherback sea turtle. Archelon lived at a time when a shallow sea covered most of central North America. Most of the known remains have been found in South Dakota and Wyoming. Though anatomically similar to the earlier species Protostega gigas, it was much larger.

Biology

Archelon httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Unlike most modern turtles, Archelon did not have a solid shell, but instead had a skeletal framework supporting a leathery or bony carapace. Other distinguishing features include a pointed tail, a narrow skull, a relatively narrow, high-vaulted shell, and a pronounced overbite. The live weight of an Archelon ischyros is estimated at more than 2200 kg (4,850 lb). They probably had a very strong bite, and were optimized for feeding on pelagic mollusks such as squid. The specimen exhibited by the Museum of Natural History in Vienna is estimated to have lived to be a century old, and may have died while brumating on the ocean floor.

Archelon Archelon Kids Dinos

Archelon Archelon Video Learning WizSciencecom YouTube

References

Archelon Wikipedia