Researchers, including those from University of Tennessee in the US, found that adults of the Deltasuchus motherali species grew up to 20 feet long.
Based on the bite marks discovered on the fossilised bones of prey animals, they ate whatever they wanted in their environment, from turtles to dinosaurs, the researchers said.
The bones were found in the heart of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex in a site in Texas in the US.
Deltasuchus is the first of what may prove to be several new species described from this fossil site, researchers said.
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"We simply do not have that many North American fossils from the middle of the Cretaceous, the last period of the age of dinosaurs, and the eastern half of the continent is particularly poorly understood," said Stephanie Drumheller- Horton from University of Tennessee, Knoxville.
"Fossils from the Arlington Archosaur Site are helping fill in this gap, and Deltasuchus is only the first of several new species to be reported from the locality," Drumheller-Horton added.
The findings were published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.
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