Kaprosuchus, nicknamed the "boar crocodile," was a crocodylomorph that lived in the Late Cretaceous period. It had long, up-and-down tusks, similar to those of a wild boar. These tusks were perfectly adapted for crushing bones and piercing the skin of its prey.
Unlike modern crocodiles, Kaprosuchus had longer legs and a more upright posture, suggesting it was primarily a terrestrial predator. It was likely fast and hunted on land, using rivers and swamps as refuge or to ambush its prey. It inhabited the region that is now the Sahara Desert, which in the Cretaceous was a lush ecosystem of rivers, swamps, and deltas, home to dinosaurs such as Spinosaurus and Carcharodontosaurus.
Description
fangs
scalie
dinosaur
slit pupils
furry
dragon
monster
tail
animal
crocodile
claws
scales
spikes
alligator
prehistoric
jurassic world
jurassic park
croc
spines
crocodilian
webbed hands
spiked
cretaceous
Details
Downloads
82
Platform
CivitAI
Platform Status
Available
Created
8/24/2025
Updated
9/27/2025
Deleted
-
Trigger Words:
Kaprosuchus
Files
Kaprosuchus_saharicus_BoarCroc_0__2.safetensors
Mirrors
CivitAI (1 mirrors)