The snake that lived through the mass extinction
Palaeophis is a marine snake that is the type genus (The genus that defines the biological family) of the extinct snake family Palaeophiidae that lived from the Cretaceous period to the Eocene epoch (around 70.6 to 33.9 Million years ago) and was round In many countries such as England, France, Denmark, Morocco, Mali aswell as many parts of the United States. This means that Palaeophis saw the final days of the dinosaurs and potentially was prey and/or hunted Dinosaurs.
These species varied broadly in size; Palaeophis casei is the smallest at 1.3 metres of length, while Palaeophis colossaeus, known from isolated vertebrae, is the largest at the estimated size limits for the genus at over 9 m (29.5 ft) in length, making it one of the largest known snakes. However most species of the genus were not as big.
The first specimen of Pterosphenus Lucas was found in Alachua County, Florida and the fossils of this specimen shed lots of light on the specializations of this giant marine snake being fully aquatic, the marrow cavities are greatly enlarged with thinning of the vertebrae walls much more so than other species of Pterosphenus.

















