50-foot snake fossil found in Gujarat mine – could be the longest one?

50-foot snake fossil found in Gujarat mine – could be the longest one?

India was a land of snake charmers!: The Westerners and others some sort of anti-Indian propagandists always used to dub that “India was a land of snake charmers,” i.e, the Indians were more interested in myths and unscientific activities. They also give the example of “Four blind men and elephant,” Indians dying at the wheels of Juggernaut and so on. Such disparaging, insulting and derogatory remarks are made, even by some sort of anti-Indian ideologists of all sorts.  They never discuss about the Surya Siddhanta, Aryabhatiya and such other astronomical and mathematical works and their relation to art and architecture. They do not relate Charaka Samhita and Sushruta Samhita to the skeleton sculptures, where all bones and skull have been depicted exactly like, as if a medical student looking at a dissected cadaver at the laboratory. They could not understand the science and technology behind the woven and dyed cloths. Under such circumstances, really a fossil of 5 50-feet snake has been found and studied scientifically.  How the general public read and react – we have to wait and see.

50 feet snake fossil found in Gujarat mine: Another day in science, another massive, ancient snake discovery. Palaeontologists in India have unearthed fossilized vertebrae from a snake that slithered around the sub-continent about 47 million years ago and may have grown as long as nearly 50 feet[1]. The newly discovered, extinct species is named Vasuki inidicus, after the mythical serpent coiled around the neck of the Hindu god Shiva, and is described for the first time in a study published April 18 in the journal Scientific Reports[2].  “Vasuki is an important piece of an ancient puzzle. It contributes to our understanding of this extinct group, and also to our understanding of large, apex, top-of-the-foodchain snakes in general,” says John Jacisin III, a palaeontologist at the University of Texas at Austin who researches reptiles but was uninvolved in the new study. Beyond reptiles, the fossil find carries broader clues to India’s climate tens of millions of years ago[3]. “It’s also just a cool snake because it was so big,” he says, comparing its length to longer than that of a yellow school bus[4].

Found in 2005 and reported in 2024: Sunil Bajpai, co-author of the study and a vertebrate palaeontologist at the Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee, first discovered the fossilized snake remains in 2005 at a coal mine in western India[5]. The mine is located in the Panandhro area of the Kutch district in western India’s state of Gujarat. Lignite is the lowest grade of coal. Over the course of a slow and careful excavation, 27 vertebrates–all likely to be from the same individual–were uncovered[6]. By analyzing the size ratios of various parts of the vertebrae and the fossils unique shapes and protrusions, Bajpai and his co-researcher established the remains were that of a new species in the extinct family of Madtsoiidae, which were primitive snakes similar to boas and pythons[7]. The fist-sized fossils are second only in girth and width to those of Tintanoboa, another giant snake estimated to have lived about 58 million years ago in what is now present-day Colombia[8]. Based on the age of the rock the newly described vertebrae were found in, the researchers date Vasuki to about 47 million years ago, just a few million years after the Indian tectonic plate began colliding with Eurasia.

Further study made: According to the new study, the timing supports the idea that Madtsoiids originated in India, and later moved to North Africa and southern Eurasia, where other, later fossil specimens have been found[9]. It’s a challenge to accurately deduce the total species body size from a single individual’s incomplete skeleton[10]. But using model equations incorporating data on current, living snakes and the known fossil record, Bajpai and his colleague, Debajit Datta–another vertebrate palaeontologist at the same institution, estimate that V. indicus was somewhere between about 36 and and 49.9 feet (10.9 and 15.2 meters) long. The only known snake of comparable size was Titanoboa, currently the record-holder for the largest snake to have ever lived. Titanoboa clocked in at an estimated 35 to 50 feet long, with the mean estimate of around 42 feet in length. The relative vertebrate sizes indicate that Titanoboa was a heavier, thicker-bodied snake than V. indicus, yet it’s impossible to know exactly which snake species would’ve won the measuring contest.

Which was the longest snake?: “Based on the data at hand Vasuki was only slightly smaller in length than Titanoboa,” Bajpai and Datta write in a joint email to PopSci. “However, we cannot entirely rule out the possibility of Vasuki being slightly larger than Titanoboa, because the fossil vertebrae in our collection may not have come from the largest individual of Vasuki. The same, however, can also be said for Titanoboa. Since neither of these snakes are known from complete skeletons, we cannot say with certainty whether one was longer or wider than the other.”Exact size estimates are liable to change as more fossils are found and more analysis is done. “Everything shrinks when the tape measure comes out,” says Alexandra Howard, a paleobiologist and herpetologist at Texas A&M University who was not involved in the new research. “It’s a running joke [in palaeontology], everyone always finds the biggest thing,” she adds–and with more discovery and scrutiny the biggest size estimates tend to scale down.

These fossils were well preserved: Nonetheless, Howard says the new discovery includes some very well-preserved fossils and is an interesting addition to our knowledge of ancient reptiles. “The past was full of giant snakes. That’s really cool,” she says. And, either way, second place in size isn’t so bad, especially when you’re separated from your closest competitor by about 10 million years. Vasuki was probably a slow-slithering ambush predator that constricted its prey like a python, according to Bajpai and Datta. Based on morphology and the location it was found in, the researchers believe the monstrous snake was either terrestrial or semi-aquatic–living in marsh or coastal swamp. It was found in rock that also contains fossils of rays, sharks, bony fish, turtles, crocodiles, and primitive whales, Bajpai and Datta note–though what it ate is unclear.

Climatic condition of the snake lived: Beyond its massive size, the new paleontological discovery is notable for what it can tell us about our planet 47-50 million years ago. “It’s an important discovery because it shows us another example of extreme gigantism in snakes… and because you can use snakes as a thermometer to reconstruct climates of the past,” says Jason Head, a vertebrate palaeontologist at the University of Cambridge in England who was one of the primary researchers involved in discovering Titanoboa. We know from geological and paleontological research that the time period, part of the Eocene Epoch, was warm, but Vasuki offers another data point indicating exactly what the climate may have been like where it was found. Snakes are ectotherms (commonly known as “cold-blooded”), so their body temperature and size is closely linked with the ambient temperature. The larger a snake is, the slower its metabolic rate, and so the warmer the climate must be for it to survive, Head explains. Estimates from modelling equations indicate that Vasuki’s habitat averaged around 28 degrees Celsius (82.4 degrees Fahrenheit), which is slightly warmer than the average annual temperature in the same region today.

India could have the ancient fossils: The ancient climate data can aid in understanding the present and where we’re headed under current climate change, says Head. “Those are the hottest latitudes and the hottest intervals, that’s going to tell us a lot about what those places might be like in the future.” As palaeontologists continue to dig into the past, predictions of the future may become clearer. And also, massive, ancient snakes are liable to keep appearing. “We understand so little about the past diversity of life on Earth,” Head notes. “I think there are probably more giant snakes to come.” “Considering its large size, Vasuki was a slow-moving ambush predator that would subdue its prey through constriction like anacondas and pythons. This snake lived in a marshy swamp near the coast at a time when global temperatures were higher than today,” said Debajit Datta, a postdoctoral researcher in palaeontology at the Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee (IITR) and lead author of the study published in the journal Scientific Reports. Because of the incomplete nature of the Vasuki remains, the researchers gave an estimated length range of 36-49 feet (11-15 meters) and a rough estimate of a metric ton in weight.

© K. V. Ramakrishna Rao

20-04-2024


[1] Populr Science, Enormous snake in ancient India was longer than a school bus – ‘The past is full of giant snakes.‘, by Lauren Leffer, Published April 18, 2024 11:00 AM EDT. https://www.popsci.com/environment/giant-snake-india-fossil/

[2] https://www.popsci.com/environment/giant-snake-india-fossil/

[3] The Hindu, Fossils of massive prehistoric snake found in lignite mine in Gujarat, Jacob Koshy- NEW DELHI,  April 19, 2024 08:02 pm | Updated April 20, 2024 10:22 am IST.

[4] https://www.thehindu.com/sci-tech/science/fossils-of-massive-prehistoric-snake-found-in-lignite-mine-in-gujarat/article68083916.ece – :~:text=The%20vertebrae%20of%20Vasuki%20Indicus,period%20called%20the%20Middle%20Eocene.

[5] Civils.dily, Vasuki fossil found- 50 feet, April 19, 2024.

[6] https://www.civilsdaily.com/news/vasuki-indicus-50ft-snake-fossil-found-in-gujarat/

[7] NDTV, Move Over Titanoboa, Fossil Of “Largest Snake To Have Ever Existed” Found In Gujarat, Science Edited by Amit Chaturvedi, Updated: April 19, 2024 10:57 am IST.

[8] https://www.ndtv.com/science/move-over-titanoboa-fossil-of-largest-snake-to-have-ever-existed-found-in-gujarat-5474872

[9] DD News, Fossils Of Colossal Snake Vasuki Unearthed In India Mine, 19/04/24 | 3:26 pm | Indian Institute of Technology Roorkee | Kutch | Vasuki | Vasuki indicus

[10] https://ddnews.gov.in/en/fossils-of-colossal-snake-vasuki-unearthed-in-india-mine/