Basilosaurus cetoides is the official state fossil of Alabama. In life, this species was a large serpentine sea creature that lived at the end of the Eocene epoch of the Cenozoic era, approximately 34 to 35 million years ago. Basilosaurus was first thought to be a reptile but was later identified as an ancient type of whale (Order Cetacea, Suborder Archaeoceti) that grew to 60 or 70 feet (18 to 20 meters) long. Most of what scientists know about Basilosaurus is based on fossils found in Alabama.
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The first Basilosaurus fossil to come to the attention of scientists was a single vertebra, or back-bone, found in Louisiana in 1832 and sent to the American Philosophical Society in Philadelphia. Natural historian Richard Harlan described the fossil in a brief report, published in 1834, in which he named the animal Basilosaurus, or "king lizard." Harlan received more Basilosaurus material from John G. Creagh, a judge in Clarke County, Alabama, in 1834. Harlan took teeth, jaws, and other bones to England in 1839, where they were examined by Richard Owen, a renowned professor of comparative anatomy at the Royal College of Surgeons. At the time, Owen was trying to determine which giant reptiles belonged in the group he termed Dinosauria. After examining Harlan's specimens, Owen concluded that Basilosaurus was a mammal, not a dinosaur or other reptile, because it had double-rooted teeth. He then proposed the species name cetoides to recognize its relationship to whales.
In the mid-1890s, the Smithsonian Institution sent professional collector, and later Yale professor, Charles Schuchert to
Choctaw County to collect Basilosaurus specimens for the U. S. National Museum of Natural History. He recovered the front part of one skeleton near Melvin and the
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The Alabama species Basilosaurus cetoides has never been found outside North America, but a slightly smaller, closely related species Basilosaurus isis is known from many skeletons in Egypt. These have pelves, and reduced, but well-formed legs, feet, and toes as vestiges
of a land-mammal ancestry lost in later whales. The Basilosaurus cetoides skeletons of Alabama all come from layers of rock that were formed at the bottom of a shallow Gulf Coast sea during the late
Eocene. Smaller archaic whales such as Zygorhiza kochii and Cynthiacetus maxwelli inhabited this sea as well, so Basilosaurus cetoides was not the only whale, just the largest and most spectacular. Rocks of the period that contain fossils of Basilosaurus cetoides belong to the Jackson Group, principally the Pachuta Marl and Shubuta Clay formations ![]()
Basilosaurus was a specialized type of animal that did not give rise to any later whales. Abrupt global cooling of the Earth's climate
at the end of the Eocene coincided with changing ocean circulation. This led to the extinction of Basilosaurus and most archaic whales around 34 million years ago. At the same time, new currents and deep ocean upwelling favored the
diversification of modern toothed and baleen whales.
Additional Resources
Code of Alabama. 1984. Designation of Basilosaurus cetoides as the State Fossil of Alabama.
Gingerich, P. D., B. H. Smith, and E. L. Simons. "Hind Limbs of Eocene Basilosaurus isis: Evidence of Feet in Whales." Science 249 (1990): 154-57.
Jones, D. E. "Doctor Koch and his 'Immense Antediluvian Monsters'." Alabama Heritage 12 (1989): 2-19.
Kellogg, R. "A Review of the Archaeoceti." Carnegie Institution of Washington Publications 482 (1936): 1-366.
Philip D. Gingerich
University of Michigan
Published November 5, 2007
Last updated January 27, 2010