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Scientists Discover 13-Foot Prehistoric Python In Taiwan


Researchers have identified fossil evidence of a giant python — estimated to exceed 13 feet in length — that once lived on Taiwan, an island where no pythons exist today. The surprising discovery is based on a single vertebra recovered from sediments dating back as far as 800,000 years. Despite the limited material, scientists were able to determine not only the snake’s size but also its classification, offering a rare glimpse into a dramatically different prehistoric ecosystem that once supported massive predators now completely absent from the region.

Researchers Found a Single Vertebra Near Tainan

The specimen is a single vertebra recovered from fossil-bearing sediments near Tainan, in southwestern Taiwan. It came from the Chiting Formation, a geological deposit formed roughly 800,000 to 400,000 years ago during the Pleistocene epoch.

The fossil was analyzed by Cheng-Hsiu Tsai of National Taiwan University and colleagues, who identified it as belonging to a python based on its structural features.

“This fossil represents the largest and most unexpected fossil snake from Taiwan,” wrote Tsai describing the find.

No python species live on Taiwan today. That makes the discovery striking and raises questions about what ancient Taiwan’s ecosystem looked like and how such a large reptile arrived there.

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How One Bone Reveals a 13-Foot Python

Researchers used the fossil vertebra to estimate the snake’s size, modeling it at approximately 13 feet in length. Vertebral dimensions in snakes can correlate with overall body length because snakes possess large numbers of vertebrae that scale proportionally with size, making even a single bone informative when analyzed with the right comparative framework.

The team also had to determine what kind of snake the vertebra belonged to. They accomplished this through comparative anatomy — systematically comparing the vertebra’s shape and structure to known python fossils, ruling out other large snake species in the process.

This kind of morphological comparison is a foundational tool in vertebrate paleontology, requiring detailed knowledge of skeletal variation across species. The structural features of the vertebra ultimately pointed to a python identification.

Why the Pleistocene Dating Matters

The fossil’s Pleistocene dating is critical for understanding how a giant python ended up on an island where none exist today. During that period, fluctuating sea levels sometimes reduced the distance between Taiwan and mainland Asia, allowing large animals to migrate to the island.

This connects to the concept of land-bridge migration — shifts in sea level during glacial and interglacial cycles can temporarily create terrestrial corridors between landmasses, enabling species dispersal. The Pleistocene epoch, which lasted from roughly 2.6 million to about 11,700 years ago, was characterized by repeated glaciation events that dramatically altered global sea levels.

The fact that no pythons live on Taiwan today suggests these migration corridors were temporary. Populations established during low sea-level periods may not have survived long-term once geographic isolation returned.

Researchers note that further discoveries from the same formation could clarify whether giant pythons were long-term inhabitants of Taiwan or only occasional arrivals. That question remains open and could be addressed by future fieldwork in the Chiting Formation.

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Taiwan’s Lost Megafauna

The python wasn’t alone. Additional fossils from the same region indicate Taiwan once supported a significantly different ecosystem, including remains of a 23-foot crocodile identified as Toyotamaphimeia taiwanicus and evidence of a saber-toothed cat likely belonging to the genus Homotherium. Mammoth remains have also been found in the regional fossil record.

Modern Taiwan has more than 50 snake species, but none approach the size of the prehistoric python, and crocodiles are no longer present on the island.

“We propose that the niche of top predators in the modern ecosystem may have been vacant since the Pleistocene extinction,” wrote Tsai.

That claim suggests modern Taiwan’s food web is fundamentally incomplete compared to what existed during the Pleistocene, with no species having stepped into roles once filled by giant pythons, crocodiles, and large cats.

Before being studied, the fossil was held by local collector Li-Ren Hou, who later donated it to National Taiwan University, where it was formally analyzed and preserved.

The study was published in Historical Biology in January 2026.

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