Via NC State University: (hat tip Floyd) -
Reconstruction of Carbonemys preying upon a small crocodylomorph. Artwork by Liz Bradford
"... A prehistoric turtle big enough to eat crocodiles has been discovered in Columbia. The turtle lived about 60-million-years ago, and was about the size of a small car.
The fossils were discovered in a coal mine in northern Colombia, in 2005. And has thusly been named Carbonemys cofrinii, ‘coal turtle’. With a skull about the size of a football, and a shell that’s about five and a half feet long.
“We had recovered smaller turtle specimens from the site. But after spending about four days working on uncovering the shell, I realized that this particular turtle was the biggest anyone had found in this area for this time period — and it gave us the first evidence of giantism in freshwater turtles,” Cadena says..."