• A giant viper from the Greek Pliocene

    The type vertebra of Laophis crotaloides modified from the original publication by Owen (1857). Image not to scale. In 1857, British palaeontologist Richard Owen described Laophis crotaloides, a new species of viperid snake, on the basis of 13 large, fossilized vertebrae from Megalo Emvolon, near Thessaloniki, in northern Greece. According to Owen, the vertebrae belonged to…

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  • A new colubrid genus and species from India

    Wallaceophis gujarateneis sp. n  A photograph of an uncollected snakes in 2007 paper depicted a small yellow snake with two dark stripes, the species discussed in the article lacked stripes, and a follow up investigation revealed a new species in a new genus with a very ancient history. Mirza et al. 2016 obtained a second…

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  • Irish Snakes?

    If snakes were introduced to Ireland, surely they would hav to  look like this. The legend of St. Patrick banishing snakes from the emerald isle some 1,500 years ago is indelibly etched in folklore — even if science suggests snakes were unlikely to have colonized the country following the last ice age. But what would happen…

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