Thor's hero shrew has a smaller skull and fewer lower vertebrae – eight instead of ten or eleven – than its sister species. The vertebrae have fewer bony offshoots and the animal's ribs are flatter and more robust. Like the hero shrew, it has an extremely strong back - roughly four times stronger than a human's when adjusted for size. It is less than 1-foot (0.30 m) long and weighs just 1.7 ounces (48 g). Hero shrews are less flexible than most mammals.
Thor's hero shrew was first described in Biology Letters by a team headed by vertebrate biologist William T. Stanley in July 2013. It was discovered when Stanley dissected a specimen of hero shrew collected in the village of Baleko and found that its spine was different from those of known specimens. The team named the shrew after the Norse god Thor due to the god's association with strength.
The structure of Thor's hero shrew's cranium and vertebrae suggest that it may be an evolutionary intermediate between the hero shrew and other shrews. Its existence may help explain the evolution of the hero shrew which, Stanley explains, has historically been cited as an excellent example of punctuated equilibrium – a theory that sometimes species evolve very rapidly in short periods of time after long periods of stability. The existence of an intermediate species hints at a more gradual or incremental evolution for the hero shrew's extreme specialization.
Thor's hero shrew may also help explain the evolutionary advantage of the interlocking vertebrae. The animal's discoverers hypothesize that both hero shrew species use their strong backs to push under logs or rocks to find worms or to crawl between the trunk and the bases of palm leaves to find larvae. The proposed behavior has not