
Using jackhammers, rock saws and chisels at a punishing 14,000 feet, paleontologists working atop a frozen Antarctic mountain have extracted a rock and ice fossil popsicle encasing the remains of a massive, previously unknown dinosaur.
The dino, which represents a new genus and species, lived 190 million years ago during the Early Jurassic at what is now Mt. Kirkpatrick, near the Beardmore Glacier. The species adds to a growing number of dinosaurs known to have roamed the now-polar continent.
Named Glacialisaurus hammeri, after noted Antarctica fossil hunter William Hammer, the new dino was identified by a femur leg bone and an incomplete ankle and foot.
"Scaling the material up to similar-sized relatives would suggest that it was around 25 feet long and weighed perhaps 4-6 tons," said Nathan Smith, a graduate student at Chicago's Field Museum and a member of the Committee on Evolutionary Biology.
Smith, along with paleontologist Diego Pol of Argentina's Museo Paleontologico Egidio Feruglio, describe the anatomy of the new sauropodomorph dinosaur in this month's Acta Palaeontologica Polonica.
Sauropodomorphs, with their incredibly long necks, tails and classic dino shape, were the largest animals ever known.
"Throughout the evolution of sauropodomorphs, there appears to be a general trend of increasing body size, and Glacialisaurus would likely fit somewhere in the middle of this evolutionary trend," Smith said.
He explained to Discovery News that this group is generally considered to be plant consumers, although some earlier members -- perhaps even the new dino -- may have eaten almost anything in sight, with plants providing the bulk.
Bones of another Antarctic dinosaur, still under preparation, suggest G. hammeri coexisted for a time with true sauropods, a related but distinct group of dinos.
The dino, which represents a new genus and species, lived 190 million years ago during the Early Jurassic at what is now Mt. Kirkpatrick, near the Beardmore Glacier. The species adds to a growing number of dinosaurs known to have roamed the now-polar continent.
Named Glacialisaurus hammeri, after noted Antarctica fossil hunter William Hammer, the new dino was identified by a femur leg bone and an incomplete ankle and foot.
"Scaling the material up to similar-sized relatives would suggest that it was around 25 feet long and weighed perhaps 4-6 tons," said Nathan Smith, a graduate student at Chicago's Field Museum and a member of the Committee on Evolutionary Biology.
Smith, along with paleontologist Diego Pol of Argentina's Museo Paleontologico Egidio Feruglio, describe the anatomy of the new sauropodomorph dinosaur in this month's Acta Palaeontologica Polonica.
Sauropodomorphs, with their incredibly long necks, tails and classic dino shape, were the largest animals ever known.
"Throughout the evolution of sauropodomorphs, there appears to be a general trend of increasing body size, and Glacialisaurus would likely fit somewhere in the middle of this evolutionary trend," Smith said.
He explained to Discovery News that this group is generally considered to be plant consumers, although some earlier members -- perhaps even the new dino -- may have eaten almost anything in sight, with plants providing the bulk.
Bones of another Antarctic dinosaur, still under preparation, suggest G. hammeri coexisted for a time with true sauropods, a related but distinct group of dinos.
No comments:
Post a Comment