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A visit to the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in Morden, Manitoba.

MEET BRUCE !!!!

Family: Mosasauridae - Subfamily: Tylosaurinae
Genus: Hainosaurus - Species: pembinensis
Hainosaurus pembinensis

Bruce lived during the late Cretaceous period, approximately 80 million years ago. He swam in a deep sea environment with numerous other marine reptiles. This ocean is termed the Western Interior Seaway and split North America in two. The Seaway spanned from the frigid waters of the Arctic Ocean to the warm currents of the Gulf of Mexico.
Bruce belonged to a group of Mosasaurs called the Tylosaurs. These Tylosaurs were the largest of the Mosasaurs, Bruce being the largest within Canada for this time period, approximately 43 feet long (~13m) from snout to tail. Bruce was a fierce predator, top of the food chain in the Seaway eating anything it its path from plesiosaurs to ammonites (shelled organisms).
The tail of Bruce is exceptionally long, moving side to side to propel him forward with snake-like undulations, while the large flippers primarily steered. Palaeontologists think the Mosasaurs lineage was branched off from a lizard group know today as the Monitor Lizards.
In 1974 Bruce was discovered north of Thornhill, Manitoba, within the Pembina Member of the Pierre Shale Formation. It took approximately two field seasons to excavate the skeleton. The skeleton was reasonably complete with 90% of the original bones.

Some 130 million years ago, North America was divided in two sections by the Western Interior Seaway. The lowlands what is now known as Manitoba, Saskatchewan and the US Midwest were one big ocean full with ferocious creatures.

During the Mesozoic Era there were many magnificent reptile forms on the earth! Dinosaurs like Spinosaurus, Triceratops, and T. rex ruled the land while their contemporaries the flying reptiles and the marine reptiles ruled the air and sea, respectively. For example, the flying Pteranodon was not a dinosaur… it belongs to a group called the Flying Reptiles that co-existed with the dinosaurs. Here in Manitoba, we had marine reptiles which also so-existed with the dinosaurs. While Albertosaurus and Lambeosaurus were fighting on land, the seaway that covered Manitoba was ruled by the fearsome mosasaur Tylosaurus and the fish-eating plesiosaur Dolichorhynchops. This made the Cretaceous Sea over Manitoba one of the most dangerous seas of all time!
“Marine reptiles were not dinosaurs”
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Comments on this photo:

Nov 30 2009 20:45 GMT annaschnitfink
Do you mind if I do not like meeting Bruce: he (eating anything and anybody) would eat me in one go!!!
Very interesting info and a great picture dear John!
Nov 30 2009 21:47 GMT charlotte
cool
Nov 30 2009 22:01 GMT abojovna PRO
80 million years ago! Stunning exhibits
Dec 01 2009 01:07 GMT Prikthai
Very intersting. I see this in Tahiland also!
Dec 01 2009 03:52 GMT GraniteRoad
Cool bones!
Dec 01 2009 05:07 GMT cdc PRO
great series
Dec 01 2009 10:04 GMT pieter40
Schitterende foto serie John,waar blijft de tijd 80 miljoen jaar.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Dec 01 2009 10:23 GMT Papagena
Do you know that in the part of Jura/Switzerland it has a lot of dinosaurus' traces. I haven't yet been there but friends told that it is very impressive.
Dec 01 2009 16:08 GMT senna3
Very impressive series!
Dec 01 2009 16:27 GMT soldier
Great place ... great capture!!!
Dec 01 2009 18:03 GMT yvon
gelukkig komen we dit formaat nu hier niet meer tegen
Dec 01 2009 18:33 GMT SaoPaulo
educational series
fav! this is such a subject to learn more and more
Dec 01 2009 18:40 GMT Lensvision
He's huge!!
Dec 01 2009 21:25 GMT martini957
WOW

FT1