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Largest dinosaur predator was a water-loving quadruped
« on: September 12, 2014, 07:38:57 pm »
Largest dinosaur predator was a water-loving quadruped
Reuters
By Will Dunham  21 hours ago



The mounted skeletal cast of the Spinosaurus aegyptiacus, a 50-foot (15-meter) long, seven-ton African predator that is the biggest dinosaur predator to ever walk the Earth, is seen during a news conference and media preview at the National Geographic Society in Washington, September 11, 2014. REUTERS/Jim Bourg



WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The biggest dinosaur predator that ever stalked the Earth was also the weirdest.

Scientists announced on Thursday the discovery in Moroccan desert cliffs of new fossil remains of Spinosaurus aegyptiacus, a 50-foot (15-meter) long, seven-ton African monster that breaks the mold for how a dinosaur predator looked and behaved.

It was roughly 9 feet (2.5 meters) longer than Tyrannosaurus rex and equally massive. Living 95 million years ago during the Cretaceous Period, Spinosaurus also is the only known dinosaur adapted for a water-loving, semi-aquatic lifestyle, the study found.

In addition, it was the only known quadrupedal dinosaur predator, unlike carnivores like T. rex, Allosaurus and Giganotosaurus with their typical two-legged stance.

With relatively short limbs, a front-heavy build, flexible tail and flat hind feet that may have been webbed and used for paddling, Spinosaurus plunged into the waterways and enjoyed an all-you-can-eat seafood buffet.



Paleontologist Simone Maganuco (R) from the Natural History Museum in Milan, Italy talks to a reporter (L) in front of the mounted skeletal cast of a Spinosaurus aegyptiacus, a 50-foot (15-meter) long, seven-ton African dinosaur predator that is the biggest dinosaur predator to ever walk the Earth during a news conference at the National Geographic Society in Washington, September 11, 2014. REUTERS/Jim Bourg


Its elongated, slender jaws and conical teeth were perfect for snaring slippery fish, the scientists found. Its back was topped with a sail-like structure of bony spines 7 feet (2 meters) tall and connected by skin. It stuck out of the water as Spinosaurus waded and swam after prey like sharks, car-size fish and crocodilians.

"The animal is unlike any other predatory dinosaur. There's no blueprint for it. There's no modern-day equivalent for it. It's looking at a completely new kind of animal," said University of Chicago paleontologist Nizar Ibrahim, who led the study published in the journal Science.

Spinosaurus terrorized a vast North African river system from Morocco to Egypt. It may not have been agile on land, Ibrahim said, but occasionally may have taken down other dinosaurs.

"Its snaggle-tooth snout, sickle-shaped claws and monstrous sail give this beast a bizarre profile, one that will be immediately recognized by every kid on our planet," added University of Chicago paleontologist Paul Sereno, who also participated.

Spinosaurus's existence has been known for a century since fragmentary remains were found in Egypt by German paleontologist Ernst Stromer. But those were destroyed in a British bombing raid on Munich in 1944. Other partial remains offered mere glimpses if its anatomy.



University of Chicago paleontologist Paul Sereno (2nd L) discusses his discovery with paleontologist Nizar Ibrahim (L) of fossils of the Spinosaurus aegyptiacus as they stand in front of a mounted skeletal cast of the 50-foot (15-meter) long, seven-ton African predator that is the biggest dinosaur predator to ever walk the Earth during a news conference at the National Geographic Society in Washington, September 11, 2014. REUTERS/Jim Bourg


Nonetheless, the legend of Spinosaurus had begun. It was featured in the 2001 movie "Jurassic Park III" vanquishing a T. rex.


'MYSTERY MAN'

Everything changed when a local fossil hunter unearthed a partial skeleton in southeastern Morocco in 2008 near the Sahara oasis town of Erfoud. Combined with fossils held in various museums and drawings of Stromer's finds, an accurate reconstruction of Spinosaurus finally evolved.

But nothing was simple. The remains found by the fossil hunter were spirited out of Morocco, depriving scientists of vital information.

They needed to locate him but did not know his identity beyond being "the mystery man with the mustache." He was finally found in 2013 and led the scientists to the excavation site. More fossils were dug up there and the missing partial skeleton turned up in the basement of a Milan museum.



Pedestrians gather to look at a life-size model of the Spinosaurus aegyptiacus dinosaur outside the National Geographic Society building in Washington, September 11, 2014. REUTERS/Jim Bourg


Using CT scans to study the structure of the bones, the researchers created a digital skeleton model and fashioned a life-size 3-D skeleton replica now displayed at Washington's National Geographic Museum.

Ibrahim described Spinosaurus's environment as "the most dangerous place in the history of our planet."

It was the king of waterways teeming with sharks and 36-foot (11-meter) crocodilians, Ibrahim said. Flying reptiles with wingspans of 23 feet (7 meters) soared overhead. On land, the 40-foot (12-meter) dinosaur predator Carcharodontosaurus was on the prowl for a meal.

Its fossils revealed unmistakable adaptations for life mostly in the water. Its unusual body plan including a relatively small pelvis and short hind legs resembles mammalian whale ancestors that appeared 45 million years later.

Small nostrils on the middle of the skull enabled it to breathe when part of the head was submerged, the scientists said. Dense bones lacking marrow cavities of other predatory dinosaurs helped control buoyancy. Powerful, long-boned feet with long, flat claws were probably used for paddling. Its flexible tail could have been used for swimming like in a crocodile.

(Reporting by Will Dunham; editing by Gunna Dickson)


http://news.yahoo.com/largest-dinosaur-predator-water-loving-quadruped-201745813.html

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Scientists Identify First Swimming Dinosaur
« Reply #1 on: September 12, 2014, 08:18:26 pm »
Scientists Identify First Swimming Dinosaur
Fossils From Morocco Reveal Spinosaurus Was Excellent Swimmer, Overturning Common View That Dinosaurs Were Terrestrial Beasts
The Wall Street Journal
By Gautam Naik  Sept. 11, 2014 2:01 p.m. ET



Spinosaurus, a meat-eating dinosaur bigger than Tyrannosaurus rex, was built for water and preferred swimming to walking, a new study says. WSJ's Gautam Naik reports. Photo: National Geographic/NOVA

A rich horde of fossils from the Sahara has revealed that the largest known predator to ever walk the earth was also a superb swimmer, overturning the common view that dinosaurs were terrestrial beasts.

In a study published Thursday in the journal Science, an international research team described how it had uncovered the partial skeleton of a semiaquatic dinosaur, Spinosaurus, in Morocco. They estimate that the creature—not yet fully grown—measured 50 feet, at least nine feet longer than the largest documented Tyrannosaurus rex.

"We've resurrected a giant from deep time…a lost world buried for more than 95 million years," said Nizar Ibrahim, a paleontologist at the University of Chicago and lead author of the study. "It is arguably the most enigmatic dinosaur" yet described.

The tale of Spinosaurus, which goes back to a cache of mysterious fossils discovered a century ago, opens a new chapter in our understanding of how some of these dinosaurs lived, evolved and ruled the earth for more than 130 million years.

Spinosauraus was an odd and fearsome predator. In addition to seven-foot-tall spines that protruded from its back and inspired its name, it had powerful forelimbs tipped with blade-like claws and an elongated snout stacked with giant conical teeth.



Fossils of a Spinosaurus, seen in a life-size model, were found in Morocco. Associated Press


But for the scientists involved in the Morocco dig, the dinosaur's apparent adaptation to water was its most striking feature.

The body shape of Spinosaurus indicates the animal would have found it easy to swim but exceedingly difficult to walk. The nostrils were located farther back on the skull so the animal could breathe when part of its head was submerged. The limb proportions—muscular thighs, short hind legs—were more typical of the ancestors of modern whales.

The notion of swimming dinosaurs "will lead us to rethink a lot of things, such as how they might have dispersed" among distant land masses, said Hans Sues, senior scientist and curator at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History in Washington, D.C., who wasn't involved in the study.

Some paleontologists have speculated that very large dinosaurs, such as sauropods, could have been aquatic because of their immense weight. But there was little hard evidence to go on. So the terrestrial view largely prevailed.

Other dinosaurs very likely caught fish without needing to swim. For example, a long-snouted creature known as Baryonyx had a large claw that would have done the job well.

The Spinosaurus enigma has persisted for a long time. In 1915, a German paleontologist called Ernst Stromer described an unusual giant predator based on fossils from Egypt. He named the creature Spinosaurus aegyptiacus: the Egyptian spine lizard.

Unfortunately, Stromer's fossils were largely destroyed during the Allied bombing of Munich, Germany, in April 1944. All that survived were his meticulous notes, sketches and photos. Ever since, scientists have been on the hunt for the elusive Spinosaurus.

During a 2008 field trip in Morocco, Dr. Ibrahim chanced upon an unusual blade-shaped bone in the possession of a local fossil hunter. He thought it looked like the Spinosaurus' distinctive spine. He later concluded that it must originate from the very same animal whose partial skeleton had come into the possession of an Italian museum.

Dr. Ibrahim returned to Morocco and began an exhaustive search for the fossil hunter. Once again, he found him in a chance encounter.

"It was something of a Mission Impossible, finding this one man in the Sahara," Dr. Ibrahim recalled.



Paleontologists Nizar Ibrahim and David Martill. Cristiano Dal Sasso


The man led Dr. Ibrahim to a fossil-rich area known as the Kem Kem beds in eastern Morocco, where he had unearthed the original fossils. It was the site of an ancient river system once populated by sharks, coelacanth fish as large as a car, and at least three T-Rex-sized carnivores.

There, Dr. Ibrahim and his team recovered a trove of fossils from a single Spinosaurus, including parts of its skull, axial column, pelvic girdle and limbs. Those pieces were digitally matched to Stromer's records and bits of fossils from various museums, eventually yielding a life-size version of Spinosaurus.

Hollywood has already cemented Spinosaurus' reputation as a fierce predator. In the 2001 film, Jurassic Park 3, the animal has a fatal jungle duel with a T-Rex, which Spinosaurus wins.

But Hollywood may have gotten it wrong. The producers "would have to go back to the drawing board," said Paul Sereno, a co-author who is also at the University of Chicago.

Given that Spinosaurus was built more for the water, "the evidence suggests it couldn't balance for a long period on its hind legs."


http://online.wsj.com/articles/scientists-identify-first-swimming-dinosaur-1410458460?ru=yahoo?mod=yahoo_itp

 

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