Posted on 03/04/2007 6:37:08 AM PST by si tacuissem
CLEVELAND, February 24, 2007 A scientist at The Cleveland Museum of Natural History has announced the discovery of a new horned dinosaur, named Albertaceratops nesmoi, approximately 20 feet long and weighing nearly one half ton, or the weight of a pickup truck. The newly identified plant-eating dinosaur lived nearly 78 million years ago during the Late Cretaceous Period in what is now southernmost Alberta, Canada. Its identification marks the discovery of a new genus and species and sheds exciting new light on the evolutionary history of the Ceratopsidae dinosaur family. Only one other horned dinosaur has been discovered in Canada since the 1950s.
Michael J. Ryan, Ph.D., Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology at the Museum reports his findings on the new genus and species in the latest volume of the Journal of Paleontology.
Albertaceratops nesmoi belongs to the Centrosaurinae, one of two subfamilies of the horned dinosaur family Ceratopsidae. Typically members of this subfamily have very short horns over their eyes, a long horn over their nose and either spikes or hooks coming off of the frill that projects from the back of their skulls.
What makes this dinosaur unique is that it is the first centrosaur with long brow horns typically found in the other subfamily, Chasmosaurine, which includes Triceratops and Torosaurus. In addition, Albertaceratops nesmoi lived more than 10 million years earlier than Triceratops.
My research team was stunned when we uncovered the skull and saw these long brow horns attached to a centrosaurine frill, said Ryan, a Canadian who was working on his Ph.D. through the University of Calgary when the specimen was found.
We knew that we had something special that we had never seen beforeit meant that while Triceratops had giant horns, some centrosaurs did, too, he added.
In addition to having long brow horns, Albertaceratops nesmoi has a long, low banana-shaped bump in place of a nasal horn. There also are two large, thick hooks that curl forward from the corners of the creatures frill. The long horns could have been used for either sexual display or self-defense against the giant predatory tyrannosaur, Daspletosaurus that roamed the region.
Analysis shows that Albertaceratops nesmoi was the most primitive member of the Centrosaurinae, and that it is placed just above the split that separated them from the group that includes Triceratops, Ryan added.
It is very surprising that a Centrosaur would have long brow horns, said Don Brinkman, Ph.D., Head of Research and Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology at the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Drumheller, Alberta, where the specimen is currently housed.
Albertaceratops nesmoi is named to honor both the province where the new dinosaur was found and Cecil Nesmo, a local rancher living near Manyberries, Alberta, who has long supported the study of palaeontology and other research in the area.
Ryan had spent four hot summers looking for long-horned centrosaurs in southern Alberta after being shown similar fossils owned by Canada Fossils. Ltd., Calgary, which had been collected from just across the border in Montana.
The most southern part of Alberta has a tremendous potential for discovering new dinosaurs, but it has been almost ignored in the past because of its remoteness, said David Evans, incumbent Associate Curator of Dinosaurs at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto.
For this reason, Ryan and Evans established the Southern Alberta Dinosaur Research Group (SADRG) (www.dinoresearch.ca) in 2005 along with colleagues from the Royal Tyrrell Museum, The University of Alberta and the University of Calgary.
According to Ryan, the support of local ranchers and families living along Albertas southern border is key to conducting scientific research in the area. In addition to facilitating the exchange of scientific information and educating students, the SADRG helps researchers coordinate their work with each other, government agencies and the local residents so that everyones concerns are met, said Ryan.
Ryan and the SADRG have their next three field seasons mapped out, and are close to announcing at least one more new, strange-horned dinosaur.
Cool stuff!
I've got a young nephew whom I'm convinced will be the next great dinosaur hunter. < |:)~
Cleveland ping!
Hmmmmm....If there had been more horny dinosaurs maybe they wouldn't be extinct!
Half-ton pick-up trucks weigh in at over one ton.
Huh? I don't think that's right; even my old light-weight Datsun weighed more than that. But it's the MSM -- can't get anyuthing right.
Something for ggg?
Maybe it is just a male version of a previously discovered species and all they have found before were fossils of females.
RIght. I'm not sure there are even any subcompact cars which weigh less than a ton. "Half-ton" has something to do with cargo capacity, I think.
capacity--right. My 3/4 ton, for example, actually weighs 4,375 lbs.
A scientist at The Cleveland Museum of Natural History has announced the discovery of a new horned dinosaur, named Albertaceratops nesmoi, approximately 20 feet long and weighing nearly one half ton......so, how'd they miss it before, that's what I wanna know. ;')
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Note: this topic is from . Thanks si tacuissem.
Linkie no workie
This creature was 20 feet long and probably like most triceratops had a massive body. I think a grizzly bear which reaches up to 8 feet probably weighs 1/2 ton. Either a typo, or a useless comparison to the capacity of a pickup truck. There was another article about a Nodosaur recently found that weighed 3,000 lb. when alive, and nowhere near 20 ft. long.
from 2007
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