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Huge mosasaur fossils united at Manitoba museum

Bruce and Suzy - two mosasaurs who lived in Manitoba millions of years ago - have been united at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in Morden, Man. Handout / The Canadian Press

MORDEN, Man. – The world’s largest publicly displayed mosasaur now has a companion at the Canadian Fossil Discovery Centre in Morden, Man.

The 13-metre-long marine reptile fossil of “Bruce” has been at the centre since 2003, and on the weekend the centre unveiled a nine-metre-long mosasaur fossil named Suzy.

READ MORE: World’s biggest mosasaur makes its home in Manitoba

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Suzy was found in 1977, not far from the area northwest of Morden where Bruce was discovered in 1974.

The executive director of the centre, Peter Cantelon, said it’s awesome to bring the skeletons together after they were apart for anywhere from 40 million to 80 million years.

Bruce is officially recognized by Guinness World Records as the largest mosasaur on public display.

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Mosasaurs were fierce predators and were once the top of the food chain in the Western Interior Seaway that split North America in two, the centre’s experts said.

Palaeontologists think the mosasaurs’ lineage was branched off from a lizard group known today as the monitor lizards, they said.

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