Zeuglodon
From: http://www.archives.state.al.us/emblems/st_fosil.html
In 1834 a complete skeleton
of a basilosaur (king of the lizards) was found on a plantation in
southwestern Alabama. Staff of the Philadelphia Academy of Natural
Sciences studied the skeleton and said it was not a lizard, but a
meat-eating member of the whale family. Because of this they renamed
it the zeuglodon (Genus Basilosaurus). Since it was a sea animal
they estimated it to be over forty-five million years old (Eocene
period). Zeuglodons averaged from fifty-five to seventy feet long
and had tails up to forty feet long.
Fossil remains of this gigantic whale were first found in Clarke
County about 1833; bones were later discovered in Choctaw and Washington
Counties.
Fossil remains of the Basilosaurus cetoides may not be removed
from the state without prior written approval of the governor.
The ancient whale fossil is most abundant in Alabama and many
zeuglodon skeletons have been found here. One was found in 1982
near Washington County and is now displayed at the McWane Center
in Birmingham. Another was found in Alabama and sent to the Smithsonian
Institution in Washington, DC. These are the two most comprehensive
Basilosaurus cetoides skeletons ever found.
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