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Look up: Sarcosuchus

  1. Sarcosuchus
    (pronounced SAHR-co-SOOK-us) Sarcosuchus meaning flesh crocodile) was a ancient crocodilian (it was not a dinosaur). This giant meat-eater was about 37-40 feet (11-12 m) long and may have weighed up to 10 tons. Its body was covered with bony armor (scutes). There were over 100 teeth in its long jaws and it had an overbite (the top jaw extended beyond the lower jaw). Sarcosuchus lived during the Cretaceous period , roughly 110 million years ago. Fossils have been found in the Ténéré Desert, Niger...
    Found on http://www.enchantedlearning.com/subject

  2. Sarcosuchus
    `Sarcosuchus` , meaning 'flesh crocodile' and commonly called ``SuperCroc``, is an extinct genus of crocodile. It dates from the early Cretaceous Period of what is now Africa and is one of the largest giant crocodile-like reptiles that ever lived. It was almost twice as long as the largest modern crocodile and weighed up to 10 times as much. Until recently, all that was known of the species was a few fossilised teeth and armour scutes, which we...
    Found on http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarcosuchus


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15 March 2010

This day in history:
The Ides of March is on March 15th every year. The expression Beware the Ides of March can mean beware of impending danger. If someone says Beware the Ides of March referring to March 15th itself, it can have the sense of March 15th being a bad luck day, just like Friday the 13th. The origin of the sinister meaning of the Ides of March is the fact that this is the actual day that Julius Caesar was assassinated in 44 BC by some Roman Senators. Over 1500 years later, William Shakespeare wrote the play Julius Caesar. That’s where the phrase Beware the Ides of March comes from. In the play, a soothsayer said it to Julius Caesar on the day of his assassination. read more

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