
Scientists find 'Devil Toad' fossil
A frog the size of a bowling ball, with heavy armour and teeth, lived
among dinosaurs millions of years ago - intimidating enough that
scientists who unearthed its fossils dubbed the beast Beelzebufo, or
Devil Toad.

A Beelzebufo ampinga facing off against the largest known living
Malagasy frog, Mantydactylus ampinga. A full -length pencil
provide size perspective. |
But its size - 10 pounds and 16 inches long - isn't the only
curiosity. Researchers discovered the creature's bones in Madagascar.
Yet it seems to be a close relative of normal-sized frogs who today live
half a world away in South America, challenging assumptions about
ancient geography.
The discovery, led by paleontologist David Krause at New York's Stony
Brook University, was published by the journal Proceedings of the
National Academy of Sciences.
"This frog, if it has the same habits as its living relatives in
South America, was quite voracious(eating a lot)," Krause said. "It's
even conceivable that it could have taken down some hatchling
dinosaurs." Krause began finding fragments of abnormally large frog
bones in Madagascar, off the coast of Africa, in 1993.
They dated back to the late Cretaceous period, roughly 70 million
years ago, in an area where Krause was also finding dinosaur and
crocodile fossils. But only recently did Krause's team assemble enough
frog bones to piece together what the creature would have looked like,
and weighed.
The largest living frog, the Goliath frog of West Africa, can reach
seven pounds. But Krause teamed with fossil frog experts from University
College London to determine that Beelzebufo isn't related to other
African frogs.
It seems to be a relative of South American horned frogs, known
scientifically as Ceratophrys. Popular as pets, they're sometimes called
pacman frogs for their huge mouths.
Like those modern frogs, Beelzebufo had a wide mouth and powerful
jaws, plus teeth. Skull bones were extremely thick, with ridges and
grooves characteristic of some type of armour or protective shield.
The name comes from the Greek word for devil, Beelzebub, and Latin
for toad, bufo (pronounced boo-foe).
The family link raises a paleontology puzzle: Standard theory for how
the continents drifted apart show what is now Madagascar would have been
long separated by ocean from South America during Beelzebufo's time.
And frogs can't survive long in salt water, Krause noted.He contends
the giant frog provides evidence for competing theories that some bridge
still connected the land masses that late in time, perhaps via an
Antarctica that was much warmer than today.
AP |