...continued
At midnight we pulled
into camp. Overcoming
substantial obstacles on a daily
basis--with nerves intact--is what
makes a successful Saharan expedition.
Curious Croc
The 2003 Expedition
isn't just on a mission to find
dinosaurs--we're trying to paint
a detailed picture of what life
was like on Africa 90 million years
ago. The discovery of a new, strange
croc at our second campsite triggered
our first round of "bone fever."

Josh Miller, a University of Chicago
grad student, suddenly thrust his
hand to the sky with a wail.
"Wow, look at this!"
There, perched between his
fingers, was a monstrous croc tooth
he had just plucked from the desert
floor. We all gathered
to marvel at the finding of a new
species. No croc of
this size easily twice that of a
large living croc had ever been
found in 90-million-year-old rocks
on Africa. It wouldn't
be long before more of the mystery
croc surfaced.
A few days later,
and two hundred miles south of Josh's
find, we were brought to another
stunning sight. "Jaws, incredible
jaws," stammered Jeff, a soft-spoken
anthropology student from the Colorado
College. He pointed. There, along
his toe-tips were a row of teeth,
each nearly an inch in diameter,
protruding from jaws diving into
the desert floor. "This
is great! More of mystery croc!
You got the front end!" I congratulated
him.
We huddled around the find on our
hands and knees and began to compare
the new curious croc with the well-know
Sarcosuchus, (a.k.a. "SuperCroc").
SuperCroc is a 40-foot-long dinosaur-eating
crocodile that haunted the waterways
on Africa 110 million years ago--20
million years earlier than the fossils
now being unearthed by the team.
What was this new croc? Could
it be a smaller relative of Sarcosuchus,
a lineage that had gone extinct?
Or is it possibly even more
closely related to living crocs?
As the crew followed
Jeff's jaws into the rock with brushes,
small picks, and dental tools, more
of the skull emerged. The
fossils continued well into the
afternoon: bony armor plates from
the back, and tail vertebrae, surfaced.
We assessed our water, plaster,
and burlap. We had just enough to
encase the discovery and bring it
back to camp.
After hours of work under intense
desert sun and temperatures that reached
120
o F, the jacket encasing
the skull was complete.
Weighing
in at about 300 pounds, the team lifted
and shoved it into the back of a Land
Rover...
continued