Raptor line: fossil finds push back dinosaur ancestry.Fossils of a newly discovered dinosaur species unearthed Unearthed is the name of a Triple J project to find and "dig up" (hence the name) hidden talent in regional Australia. Unearthed has had three incarnations - they first visited each region of Australia where Triple J had a transmitter - 41 regions in all. in Argentina suggest that the reptile's lineage is older and more widespread than previously suspected. The finding might require scientists to remodel parts of the dinosaur family tree. The creature, dubbed Buitreraptor gonzalezorum, belonged to a group of bipedal bipedal adjective Capable of locomotion on 2 feet , meat-eating dinosaurs called dromaeosaurids, the clan of raptors that includes the darting, humansize velociraptors made famous in the 1993 film Jurassic Park'. An adult B. gonzalezorum would have been slender and measured about 1.5 meters from the tip of its snout snout the upper lip and the apex of the nose, especially of the pig. Called also rostrum. Has a specialized skin to survive the rigors of rooting, is supported by a separate bone (the os rostri), and also has a few sensory hairs. to the tip of its tail--"like a big rooster with long legs and a long tail," says Peter J. Makovicky, a vertebrate paleontologist at the Field Museum in Chicago. He and his colleagues describe the dinosaur in the Oct. 13 Nature. Brothers Jorge and Fabian Gonzalez, Argentine paleontologists for whom the species was named, found the original remains of the small dinosaur. Overall, researchers have found four specimens, all far south of where any indisputable dromaeosaurid remains have ever been discovered. One particularly well-preserved skeleton is missing only some hand, foot, and tail bones. Previously unearthed fossils suggested that dromaeosaurids lived in the Southern Hemisphere, but the new find seals the case, says Makovicky. If the earlier finds were dromaeosaurids, B. gonzalezorum is older, by millions of years, than any of this group found south of the equator. The newfound fossils were excavated from rocks that lie beneath, and so must be older than, a laver of volcanic material laid down about 90 million years ago. B. gonzalezorum differs from its kin found in the Northern Hemisphere. For instance, its skull is between 25 and 33 percent longer than its femur femur (fē`mər): see leg. , the upper leg bone, whereas its Asian and North American North American named after North America. North American blastomycosis see North American blastomycosis. North American cattle tick see boophilusannulatus. cousins typically have skull and femur measurements that approximately match. The long, slim snout suggests that B. gonzalezorum preyed on small animals that didn't put up much of a fight. Fossils of potential victims such as lizards and small mammals are abundant where B. gonzalezorum was unearthed, says Makovicky. When the dinosaur strolled across the South American landscape, that continent already had long since split from the landmasses that became Asia and North America. Dromaeosaurids' presence on all of those continents suggests that the group's common ancestor lived on the Gondwana supercontinent su·per·con·ti·nent n. A large hypothetical continent, especially Pangaea, that is thought to have split into smaller ones in the geologic past. Also called protocontinent. when it was still intact, at least 145 million years ago. The new find indicates that dromaeosaurids were far more widespread than previously recognized, says Mark A. Norell, a paleontologist at the American Museum of Natural History American Museum of Natural History, incorporated in New York City in 1869 to promote the study of natural science and related subjects. Buildings on its present site were opened in 1877. in New York New York, state, United States New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of . The discovery thus could require researchers to rearrange the dinosaur family tree. Many features of B. gonzalezorum are similar to those of Rahonavis ostromi, a small, birdlike dinosaur from Madagascar. Those commonalities might prompt paleontologists to move Rahonavis from the primitive-bird branch of the dinosaur family tree into the dromaeosaurid group, says Thomas R. Holtz Jr. of the University of Maryland, College Park The University of Maryland, College Park (also known as UM, UMD, or UMCP) is a public university located in the city of College Park, in Prince George's County, Maryland, just outside Washington, D.C., in the United States. . Dromaeosaurids had the same joint arrangement as did early birds such as Archaeopteryx Archaeopteryx (är'kēŏp`tərĭks) [Gr.,=primitive wing], most primitive known bird, a 150 million-year-old fossil of which was first discovered in 1860 and described the following year in the late Jurassic limestone of Solnhofen, , Holtz adds. Although B. gonzalezorum probably couldn't have sustained powered flight, "it's not out of the realm [of possibility] that a common ancestor of Archaeopteryx and dromaeosaurs could have been a flyer," he notes. |
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