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Newfound dinosaur wasn't sticking its neck out.


Sauropod dinosaurs, the group of herbivores that included the largest land animals that ever lived, are renowned for their incredibly long necks. Fossils of a newly discovered, 10-meter-long species excavated in South America South America, fourth largest continent (1991 est. pop. 299,150,000), c.6,880,000 sq mi (17,819,000 sq km), the southern of the two continents of the Western Hemisphere. , however, suggest that this particular sauropod sauropod

Any species of four-legged, herbivorous, saurischian dinosaur in the suborder Sauropoda. The sauropods include the largest of all dinosaurs and the largest land animals that ever lived.
 bucked that trend.

Many scientists consider the long necks of most sauropods to be an important feeding adaptation, says Oliver W.M. Rauhut of the Bavarian State Collection for Paleontology paleontology (pā'lēəntŏl`əjē) [Gr.,= study of early beings], science of the life of past geologic periods based on fossil remains.  and Geology in Munich. Some species in the group gained additional neck length over geologic time both by growing more bones in their neck and by lengthening the individual vertebrae Vertebrae
Bones in the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar regions of the body that make up the vertebral column. Vertebrae have a central foramen (hole), and their superposition makes up the vertebral canal that encloses the spinal cord.
, he notes. In extreme cases, a sauropod's neck could have 19 bones, some longer than 2 m, and measure four times the length of the animal's body.

Rauhut and his colleagues, who describe the 150-million-year-old species in the June 2 Nature, dubbed the animal Brachytraehelopan mesai. The creature's neck, they report, was only about three-quarters the length of its body.

Flanges protruding pro·trude  
v. pro·trud·ed, pro·trud·ing, pro·trudes

v.tr.
To push or thrust outward.

v.intr.
To jut out; project. See Synonyms at bulge.
 from the upper surface of the neck vertebrae prevented B. mesai from flexing its neck upward, says Rauhut. Therefore, unlike its long-necked kin that browsed treetop vegetation, B. mesai probably foraged for foliage between 1 and 2 m off the ground.--S.P.
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Title Annotation:PALEONTOLOGY
Publication:Science News
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:1USA
Date:Jun 18, 2005
Words:204
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