Curate, connect, and discover
every time i see the dunkleosteus
Dunkleosteus, a placoderm, or armoured, fish. It lived around 370 million years ago, during the Devonian period and is arguably the biggest predator of its time. This was a truly impressive fish, literally hard as nails, its head was encased in a solid armour plating and like a shark, it had a streamlike body to swiftly move through the water. Its heavy armour means it would’ve been a relatively slow swimmer, yet capable of short spurts of speed, sort of like some sharks today.
This formidable beast had a major evolutionary strength, a moveable jaw. Fish began to dominate the oceans when they evolved the ability to move their jaw, yet Dunkleosteus had no teeth, what it had was much more menacing. It had razor like blades to slice its prey apart, like a pair of scissors to paper, with a bite more powerful than a great white. It would’ve been able to slice its prey in half so it was able to consume huge animals, yet on the downside the Dunkleosteus was unable to chew and on occasion its stomach found the huge chunks of meat hard to handle, evidence of this is in fossilised sick of the Dunkleosteus that has been found…
(Dunkleosteus armour means its head is often very well preserved. You can see how its teeth would’ve been more than capable of shearing through flesh.)
Relatives of the dunkleosteus, other armoured fish, were mostly dog sized, but Dunkleosteus was an exception. At 6 metres long on average, twice the length of human, this was a seriously big fish, yet it could reach up to 10 metres long, the length of a bus.
Dunkleosteus seems like the perfect predator. However, in its bony plates, indents of other animal teeth have been found suggesting that despite its strength, it was itself hunted. Dunkloesteus teeth marks have been found in its own fossils, they would eat whatever they could get their teeth into, including each other. The success of this gigantic beast was short lived, it was outcompeted by the more nimble sharks. Placoderm fish themselves would be extinct by the end of the devonian, taking the Dunkleosteus with it.
I am so grateful that this thing is fucking extinct.
I would never have been able to tolerate having the job of creating this 3D model.
THIS IS WHAT MY WORST NIGHTMARE LOOKS LIKE.
gocmnh
It’s Dunkleosteus, the Devonian Destroyer! This specimen was discovered right here in Cleveland.
Welcome to….DEVONIAN PARK. Please don’t tap the glass (the dunks are very sensitive).
Wow, it’s Friday! Have a great weekend.
Dunkleosteus model featured in ep. 12 of Shelf Life: 6 Extinctions in 6 Minutes.
Savage 10 metre fish of the Silurian and Devonian Heavily armoured piscine torpedoes with fierce teeth roamed the oceans in the early days of fishes, in fact the Devonian era is called the age of fishes by palaeontologists as they had a huge burst of speciation and diversified to fill most marine ecological niches during this time. The now extinct (fortunately) class known as placodermi (plate skin in Greek) was the apex predator of these long gone waters, and thrived from 438 to 358 million years ago, dying out at the end Devonian mass extinction (one of the lesser ones).
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