WHAT IF TITANOBOA (THE LARGEST SNAKE) NEVER GO EXTINCT?

Amarnath P
3 min readMar 29, 2021

Approximately 60 million years ago after the mass extinction of Dinosaurs, gaint snakes where roaming Americas.

One of them was the Titanoboa, one of the gaints in that time. It was related to the modern day boa, A monster among the Titanoboa species.

Now days Titanoboa was extinct, thanks for that. But what if it wasn’t extinct?

Recently a team of scientists found Titanoboa’s fossil at an open-pit coal mine in Colombia.

According to fossils, Titanoboa was 12.8 meters or 42 feet long and weighed about 1,100 kg or 2500 pounds.

But because snake fossils are extremely hard to find, it's not completely out of the question that it could have grown to be even larger.

Its believed that Titanoboa ate large turtles and crocodylomorphs, which were essentially giant crocodiles.

The Titanoboa lived in what is believed to have been the first recorded Neotropical forest that ever existed, where Central and SouthAmerica exist today.

Well back during the Paleocene era, the earth was quite a bit warmer. Helping it to grow larger, to a size which we never before that snakes could exist.

Even to this day, as you move away from the equator, ectothermic animals decrease in size.

Titanoboa became the rainforest’s top predator, and for good reason.

It is the biggest snake to ever have lived.

Titanoboa killed its victims using asphyxiation, where it wrapped itself tightly around its prey and squeezed until it suffocated.

Once you are in the Titanoboa mouth, there is no escape.

Row upon row of sharp, curved teeth that point to the rear of its mouth keeps the prey moving toward the stomach.

Thankfully, Titanoboa began to go extinct towards the beginning of the Miocene era, but now that you know a little about Titanoboa, let's talk about what would happen if it never went EXTINCT.

First things first, because Titanoboa would need to live in warm climates, it would only be able to survive in rainforests near the equator.

This would be good news for everyone who lived farther north or south of the equator.

It would, however, mean bad news for any central and south Americans that lived anywhere near the habitat of Titanoboa.

Indigenous people in the area like the Aztecs and the Incas probably would have regarded Titanoboa as a god and would have made sacrifices to it.

That is if Titanoboa didn’t prey on them.

As Titanoboa hunted mostly in water, a way for forest-dwelling people to escape it could be to build their homes in trees.

In modern times, there would, of course, be hunters who would try to track down Titanoboa for various reasons, perhaps even for food.

Titanoboa meat would be considered a delicacy, one food connoisseurs would be eager to put on their plates.

But catching a Titanoboa would not be easy.

Navigating the difficult, swampy terrain of the rainforest would be needless to say, difficult.

But one thing you could do to lure it close would be to set a trap.

Crocodiles, the Titanoboa's main food source, also lived until modern day.

Set a trap with a crocodile and wait for boa to come to you.

Once it devoured its meal, like most snakes, it would be tired and less likely to attack.

This would be the perfect time to strike.

Countless books and television shows would be made about the Titanoboa.

Nature Shows like BBC’s planet earth would do everything in their power, even risk lives to get footage of it.

It's not likely that the Titanoboa would be kept in zoos, after all, it's huge, and it would have to be fed crocodiles.

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Amarnath P

A #AstroPhile and a #GreenPanther, loves to write articles based on #astronomy, #technology, #tips&tricks and more......