Mosasaurs were large marine reptiles that lived in the Late Cretaceous period, approximately 100 million
Mosasaurs were large marine reptiles that lived in the Late Cretaceous period, approximately 100 million to 66 million years ago. Celina Suarez, Alberto Pérez-Huerta, and T. Lynn Harrell Jr. examined oxygen-18 isotopes in mosasaur tooth enamel in order to calculate likely mosasaur body temperatures and determined that mosasaurs were endothermic—that is, they used internal metabolic processes to maintain a stable body temperature in a variety of ambient temperatures. Suarez, Pérez-Huerta, and Harrell claim that endothermy would have enabled mosasaurs to include relatively cold polar waters in their range. Which finding, if true, would most directly support Suarez, Pérez-Huerta, and Harrell’s claim?
- A) Mosasaurs
- B) Fossils of both mosasaurs and nonendothermic marine reptiles have been found in roughly equal numbers in regions known to be near the poles during the Late Cretaceous, though in lower concentrations than elsewhere.
- C) Several mosasaur fossils have been found in regions known to be near the poles during the Late Cretaceous, while relatively few fossils of nonendothermic marine reptiles have been found in those locations.
- D) During the Late Cretaceous, seawater temperatures were likely higher throughout mosasaurs
Correct Answer: D) During the Late Cretaceous, seawater temperatures were likely higher throughout mosasaurs
Explanation
The correct choice that would most directly support Suarez, P

