Titanoboa is the largest snake from the ancient world, and it’s known as the ‘Master of Snake’; its length is about 42.7 feet (13 meters0 and average weight is about 1,135 kg (1.25 tons).
It’s found in La Gujlra in Northeastern Colombia of present world during the middle & late Palaeocene period and the first fossil was discovered from coal mine of Colombia in 2000s by students from university of Floridan and the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute.
Its’s believed that, the last Titanoboa was died on 58 to 60 million years ago due to climate change and the reptiles couldn’t maintain their metabolism.
But there is a latest news, in the year of 1995, a Belgium Helicopter pilot colonel Reny Van Lierde captured a photograph from Helicopter during patrolling over Congo, he claims that, the snake was near about 50 feet and a colour of deep green, with white belly, its jaw was in triangle shaped, and head were about 2 feet wide & 3 feet long in size. Van Lierde claims that is he flew lower for closer inspection the snake rose up approximately 10 feet giving a warning that would have attacked the copter if had within striking range.