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Shark-munching Spinosaurus was first-known water dino
« on: September 11, 2014, 08:54:50 pm »
First Swimming Dinosaur Was 'Half-Duck, Half-Crocodile'
LiveScience.com
By Stephanie Pappas, Live Science Contributor  50 minutes ago



Digital skeletal reconstruction and transparent flesh outline of Spinosaurus aegyptiacus. Color codes are used to show the origin of different parts of the digital skeletal model.



The fearsome Spinosaurus is one of the icons of the dinosaur pantheon. It was larger than T. rex (and larger than all other carnivorous dinosaurs, in fact), and on its back it sported a sail taller than an adult man.

Now, researchers have discovered something even more astonishing about this ancient beast. Spinosaurus was the only known dinosaur adapted to living almost entirely in the water.

Around 97 million years ago, in a river system in what is now Africa, the enormous Spinosaurus aegyptiacus sliced through the water, snaring fish in its cone-shaped, interlocking teeth, researchers report today (Sept. 11) in the journal Science. New fossils reveal that the 50-foot-long (15 meters) dinosaur had a host of adaptations for an aquatic lifestyle, including flat, possibly webbed feet and nostrils high up on its head.

"The animal we are resurrecting is so bizarre that it is going to force dinosaur experts to rethink many things they thought they knew about dinosaurs," said Nizar Ibrahim, a vertebrate paleontologist at the University of Chicago who led the new study of Spinosaurus.

The tale of how this sail-backed beast came to be recognized as the first-known semi-aquatic dinosaur spans more than a century and involves the tragedy of war as well as incredible good luck.


A dinosaur tale

Spinosauruswas first described in 1915 by a German paleontologist named Ernst Stromer, who found some of the animal's bones — including backbones with spines up to 7 feet (2.1 m) tall — in Egypt. Stromer produced detailed illustrations and descriptions of his discovery, but in April 1944, his entire collection, including Spinosaurus, was destroyed in an Allied Royal Air Force bombing of Munich.

Other people found fragments ofSpinosaurus bones after Stromer's collection was destroyed, but none were as complete as the skeleton lost to Allied bombs. That is, until April 2008.



Paleontologists David Martill, Nizar Ibrahim, Paul Sereno and Cristiano Dal Sasso at a field site at the Kem Kem beds of eastern Morocco, from left to right), with a partial spine of Spinosaurus can be seen in the foreground.


In that month, Ibrahim and his colleagues were returning from fieldwork in the Kem Kem Beds of Morocco when they stopped in a desert town where locals often brought them fossils to identify. A local fossil hunter approached with a cardboard box fill of sediment and several bones.

One bone caught Ibrahim's eye. It was long and blade-shaped, perhaps a rib, but with an odd red line running through its cross section.

"I thought, 'Maybe this is a rib, but maybe, just maybe, this is a spine of Spinosaurus,'" Ibrahim told reporters during a teleconference this week. He arranged to have the bones kept in the university collection in Casablanca, hoping he'd one day be able to identify them.

Not long after, Ibrahim was visiting the Museo Civico di Storia Naturale di Milano when paleontologists there showed him some commercially acquired bones they believed to be from Spinosaurus. There, on one of the spines, was the same red line Ibrahim had seen in a cardboard box in Morocco.

Unfortunately, the bones had been taken out of context, and the researchers in Milan couldn't say where they were found. The moment launched what Ibrahim called "Mission Impossible." He had to go back to Morocco, find the man with the cardboard box and learn where the Spinosaurus bones had come from.

One problem: The only thing Ibrahim knew about the man with the cardboard box was that he had a mustache. Still, he and his colleagues returned to the village and asked around, to no avail. Near the end of the failed mission, Ibrahim sat in a cafe drinking mint tea and envisioning his dreams going down the drain. At that moment, in a twist worthy of a Hollywood blockbuster, the mustached man walked by his table.


Aquatic adaptations

With a guide to lead them to the Spinosaurus site, the researchers discovered even more bones, all from the same individual dinosaur. They soon realized that these bones were very strange indeed. They were very dense, without the hollow medullary cavity found at the center of the long bones of the arms and legs in most animals. Dense bones like these are found in marine animals and function as a sort of buoyancy control.

The research team combined the new bones with Stromer's drawings and other Spinosaurus bones from a half dozen museums worldwide to create a digital model of the animal's skeleton. Evidence from the skeleton pointed to a watery lifestyle: the interlocking, crocodilelike teeth, ideal for catching swimming prey; the nostrils in the middle of the snout, high on the head; the flexible, rudderlike tail and small hind limbs, common in aquatic animals; and the flat, paddlelike feet, which Ibrahim and his colleagues suspect may have been webbed. The dinosaur even had a network of holes and channels, called foramina, in its snout, identical to structures that modern-day crocodiles use to detect pressure changes in the water made by swimming prey.

What's more, when researchers analyzed the skeleton, they found that Spinosaurus aegyptiacus had a center of mass far forward on its body, which would have suited it very well in the water. On land, however, the dinosaur would have had to use its front limbs to balance rather than striding around on its hind limbs like a T. rex.

"You would not want to meet this animal on land, but it was not gallivanting across the landscape," said study researcher Paul Sereno, a vertebrate paleontologist at the University of Chicago.

Other Spinosaurus species ate fish, Sereno said, but Spinosaurus aegyptiacus is apparently the only one that took the lifestyle to the next level, spending most of its time in the water.

Questions remain about the species, however. Spinosaurus' enormous sail remains something of a mystery, though the researchers suspect it was used as a display structure and was probably often visible as the animal swam. The researchers are also very interested in learning more about how Spinosaurus moved through the water. Sereno said it most likely propelled itself with both legs and tail.

"It's a chimera. It's half-duck, half-crocodile," Sereno said. "We don't have anything alive that looks like this animal."


http://news.yahoo.com/first-swimming-dinosaur-half-duck-half-crocodile-185539961.html

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Alien-like giant water-living dinosaur unveiled
« Reply #1 on: September 11, 2014, 09:03:35 pm »
Alien-like giant water-living dinosaur unveiled
Associated Press
By SETH BORENSTEIN  1 hour ago



WASHINGTON (AP) — Picture the fearsome creatures of "Jurassic Park" crossed with the shark from "Jaws." Then super-size to the biggest predator ever to roam Earth. Now add a crocodile snout as big as a person and feet like a duck's. The result gives you some idea of a bizarre dinosaur scientists have just unveiled.

Lead discoverer Nizar Ibrahim of the University of Chicago said it's so weird that studying it was like working on an extraterrestrial.

The 50-foot-long predator is the only known dinosaur to live much of its life in the water.

Scientists had some bones from the beast already, but the new skeleton discovery forced a major rethinking of what it looked like some 95 million years ago.

The result was described Thursday in the journal Science.


http://news.yahoo.com/alien-giant-water-living-dinosaur-unveiled-180131035.html

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Shark-munching Spinosaurus was first-known water dino
« Reply #2 on: September 11, 2014, 09:20:57 pm »
Shark-munching Spinosaurus was first-known water dino
AFP
By Kerry Sheridan  40 minutes ago



A full-sized skeletal model of a Spinosaurus, the largest predatory dinosaur ever to roam the Earth, is seen in a new exhibit at the National Geographic Museum in Washington, DC on September 11, 2014 (AFP Photo/Saul Loeb)



Washington (AFP) - There once was a dinosaur, bigger than a T. rex, that swam with the sharks -- and ate them for dinner.

The first evidence that a fierce and well-known meat-munching dinosaur, Spinosaurus aegyptiacus, was adapted for both land and water was featured in the US journal Science on Thursday.

Picture a giant hybrid of a duck and a crocodile that lived 95 million years ago, sloshing through rivers and feasting on prehistoric sharks, sawfish and lungfish.

The 20-metric-ton beast boasted a crest on its back, akin to a boat's sail, held aloft with spines as tall as an average human.

Its long tail, narrow hips and paddle-shaped feet likely helped the 50-foot-long (15-meter) creature move through the water with ease, experts said.

Spinosaurus also had dense bones to help control its buoyancy in water, and a long snout with high-set nostrils that could allow easy breathing while partially submerged.

"Taken together, these features strongly suggest that Spinosaurus was the first dinosaur that spent a significant amount of time in the water," said lead author Nizar Ibrahim, a paleontologist at the University of Chicago.


- Movie scenes 'wrong' -



A full-sized skeletal model of a Spinosaurus, the largest predatory dinosaur ever to roam the Earth, is seen in a new exhibit at the National Geographic Museum in Washington, DC on September 11, 2014 (AFP Photo/Saul Loeb)


The 2001 movie Jurassic Park III features a scene in which a Spinosaurus attacks a Tyrannosaurus rex and snaps the legendary carnivore's neck.

Scientists have long known the scene was not accurate. T. rex lived in North America some 30 million years after Spinosaurus disappeared, and Spinosaurus bones have been unearthed only in Africa.

But Paul Sereno, a paleontologist and co-author of the study also from the University of Chicago, said the latest research casts even more doubt on that Hollywood portrayal.

Spinosaurus might have made nests for its young on land but the front-heavy creature would not have been particularly agile on solid ground, he said.

"I think that we have to face the fact that the 'Jurassic Park' folks have to go back to the drawing board on Spinosaurus," Sereno told reporters.

"The evidence suggests it could not balance for a long period of time on its hind limbs."

Sereno said the Spinosaurus appeared to have "bodily adaptions showing transitions from a land-based predator to a semi-aquatic predator."



Researcher Cristiano Dal Sasso examines a full-sized skeletal model of a Spinosaurus, the largest predatory dinosaur ever to roam the Earth, at the National Geographic Museum in Washington, DC on September 11, 2014 (AFP Photo/Saul Loeb)


- Lost in WWII -

Bones from the predator's skull, vertebra, pelvis and limbs were found last year along an old riverbank in the Sahara desert, in the Kem Kem beds of eastern Morocco.

The discovery was a boon to paleontologists, who have had little to study when it came to Spinosaurus even though it was first identified from bones found in Egypt in 1912 by German paleontologist Ernst Freiherr Stromer von Reichenbach.

That collection was destroyed during World War II. In 1944, British airplanes bombed the Munich museum where they were kept.

However, not all experts are convinced that the latest findings show a swimming dinosaur.

Ken Carpenter, director and curator of paleontology at the Prehistoric Museum in Price, Utah, said the waters in the region might not have been deep enough for it to truly swim.

"The rivers in the land of Spinosaurus were small and undoubtedly shallow (hip deep at most)," Carpenter told AFP in an email.

"As for the anatomical evidence, there are lots of alternative hypotheses to explain the oddities," he added.

"The high placement of the nostrils occurs in other dinosaurs. Such an occurrence was once used as evidence that Diplodocus was aquatic."

Diplodocus was a massive, long-necked plant-eating dinosaur that lived about 150 million years ago.

"That idea has since been dropped in part because evidence of large, deep bodies of water are missing from the formation Diplodocus is found in," Carpenter said.

Researchers who worked on the paper said it is still unclear exactly how the dinosaur swam, or what its motion looked like in the water.

"It's a half-duck, half-crocodile. We don't have anything alive that looks like this animal that we can use alone as a model," Sereno said.

"It makes it particularly interesting to figure out in the future what it was doing."

An exhibit featuring a life-sized model of the Spinosaurus opens to the public at the National Geographic Museum in Washington on Friday.


http://news.yahoo.com/shark-munching-spinosaurus-first-known-water-dino-study-184006975.html

 

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