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Project Exploration  - Paleontology Education and Dinosaur Exhibits
Using the wonders of science to inspire city kids
950 East 61st Street Chicago, IL 60637 • 773.834.7614 • F.773.834.7625   
 
 
Argentina 1988 ::
Location:
  Ishigualasto badlands of Argentina
   
Age of fossil beds:
  Middle Triassic
   
Primary Goals:
  Search for dinosaur origins
   

Accomplishments:

 

Discovery of Herrerasaurus ischigualastensis.
Known previously only from hind limb bones, Paul Sereno's discovery of an articulated skeleton eroding from a sandstone ledge allowed the team to reconstruct Herrerasaurus' 12-foot long skeleton. A skeleton and flesh model is currently on display at the Field Museum of Natural History in Chicago.


Argentina
Photo © Paul Sereno
The Herrerasaurus site in Argentina
 
 
Highlights:
 

It's nice to start out with a bang...

"The earliest dinosaur remains were discovered in the late 1950s in the foothills of the Andes in northwestern Argentina. The goals of this expedition, my first as leader, was to explore this region known as Ischigualasto, to recover more complete remains of the earliest dinosaurs, and to better document the transition to a world dominated by dinosaurs. 

I and my six-person American crew departed for Argentina in April. We were joined by several Argentine colleagues, setting up camp in the Ischigualasto badlands for a two-month stay. Three weeks later, I discovered an articulated skeleton of Herrerasaurus eroding from a sandstone ledge: my eyes slowly stopped along what appeared to be neck vertebrae - literally, one by one - right up to the back end of  the skull of a primitive dinosaur. Unlike the early finds reported 25 years before, this skeleton had a skull and forelimbs, which allowed the first accurate reconstruction of this very primitive dinosaur. 

Besides several additional partial skeletons of Herrerasaurus, the team discovered the remains of many other contemporary animals and plants. The Triassic habitat that Herrerasaurus roamed was forested and dissected by rivers and transient lakes. 

Herrerasaurus was named in honor of Victorino Herrera, a local artisan who led paleontologists to the first bones some 25 years ago. It was a great treat to meet Victorino and his wife in their modest home on the edge of Ischigualasto, just after our discovery of the Herrerasaurus skeleton. He passed away in 1990." - Paul Sereno


 
 
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