Titanoboa is estimated to have been around 49 feet from nose to tail. This estimate was derived by using complex calculations based on measurements taken from specimens of skeletal remains - coupled with computer simulations.
Titanoboa is approximately 48 feet otherwise it's as long as a transit bus.
It is 48 feet long the longest snake to ever live.
Titanoboa no longer lives. It's an extinct species that was believed to grow to fifty feet (15.24 metres) long !
13 to 15 meters
I Would Say Either But I Would Have To Go With Megalania Because It Was Smarter And Had Sharper Teeth Than Titanoboa. Yes, I Know Titanoboa Was Larger, Stronger And Has The Ability To Constrict But Megalania Had Huge Teeth That Can Bite Through Titanoboa's Skin, Megalania Had A Long Tail That Could Probably Slap Titanoboa's Head. And With The Titanoboa Stunned, The Megalania Can Eat The Titanoboa. And Yes, I Know They Did Not Meet.
Titanoboa was created in 2009.
I Would Say Either But I Will Have To Say Megalania Because It Was Smarter Than Titanoboa And Also Had More Sharper Teeth Than Titanoboa. And Yes, I Know Titanoboa Was Larger, Stronger And Had The Ability To Constrict Like It's Smaller Living Cousins Today But Megalania Was Smarter, Faster And Had Sharper Teeth Than Titanoboa. Titanoboa Would Crush Itself On Land If It Stayed On Land For Too Long. Megalania Had Another Trick On It's Sleeve That It Did To Prey And It Was Tail Swiping Like If A Titanoboa Came Out Of The Water To Feed, A Megalania Comes Out And Tail Swipes The Titanoboa And Kills It. And Yes, I Know They Don't Meet.
The largest snake was Titanoboa cerrejonesis. It was calculated at 50 feet long.
None did. Titanoboa went extinct long before the ice ages began. Species go extinct fairly regularly do to environmental changes and competition with other species.
Titanoboa is a snake that was 42 to 45ft long, weighing 1.25 tons and lived during the paleocene epoch. This gigantic snake is now extinct and lived in South America, Colombia to be exact. It lived in jungles and water.
the first ice age killed the titanoboa about 50million years ago
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Titanoboa
it froze to death
solitary