Massive Spinosaurus aegyptiacus believed to have lived in the oceans
Fossil evidence shows Spinosaurus was largest predatory dinosaur, putting T.rex in the shade

Scientists have long known there were marine reptiles prowling the seas, but they couldn't find fossils that put dinosaurs in the water.
Now, fossil evidence published on Thursday in Science magazine changes that, and the Spinosaurus aegyptiacus is breaking records. It is now the largest predatory dinosaur known, three metres longer than the largest Tyrannosaurus rex.
But more importantly, Spinosaurus also provides evidence for a semi-aquatic dinosaur.
Spinosaurus was discovered in the Sahara more than a century ago by German palaeontologist Ernst Freiherr Stromer von Reichenbach, but his fossils were lost in the second world war.
When a partial skeleton was uncovered in the Moroccan Sahara, scientists had a new clue that there was something about the massive creature.
The 'Jurassic Park' folks have to go back to the drawing board on Spinosaurus
In addition to revealing a record-breaking length, digital modelling of the skeleton suggested aquatic adaptations.