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Antarctic dinosaur fossil.


Antarctic dinosaur fossil

Scientists working with the Argentine Antarctic Institute report they are the first to discover a dinosaur fossil in Antarctica. Until now, paleontologists had found dinosaur remains on every continent except Antarctica, where conditions make it difficult to hunt for fossils. This find confirms the assumption that dinosaurs were distributed worldwide, says Nicholas Hotton at the National Museum of Natural History For the museum in Manhattan, see .

This article is about the museum in Washington, D.C.. For other uses, see National Museum of Natural History (disambiguation).

The National Museum of Natural History
 in Washington, D.C. It also helps bolster the relatively small collection of fossils from the Southern Hemisphere.

According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 an Argentine press release, the 70-million-year-old fossil fragments belonged to a small, armored herbivore herbivore: see carnivore.
herbivore

Animal adapted to subsist solely on plant tissues. Herbivores range from insects (e.g., aphids) to large mammals (e.g., elephants), but the term is most often applied to ungulates.
 of the order Ornithischia Noun 1. order Ornithischia - extinct terrestrial reptiles having bird-like pelvises: armored dinosaurs (thyreophorans); boneheaded and horned dinosaurs (marginocephalians); duck-billed dinosaurs (euronithopods)
Ornithischia
. The fossil shows that Antarctica was warmer when the animal lived than it is today, according to the Argentine scientists.

Bones, plates and a skull of the dinosaur were found on James Ross Island
''For a similarly named island near Antarctica, see Ross Island
James Ross Island () is a large island off the southeast side and near the northeastern extremity of Antarctic Peninsula, from which it is separated by
, which is near the tip of a peninsula that juts out toward South America. According to Hotton, the discovery may put some constraints on the location of Antarctica 70 million years ago: If the fossil is shown to be related to other dinosaurs that lived in South America at that time, it will support the idea that Antarctica and South America were once linked.
COPYRIGHT 1986 Science Service, Inc.
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Copyright 1986, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Publication:Science News
Date:Nov 22, 1986
Words:199
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