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UPDATE ON DINOSAUR DISCOVERIES
from PAUL SERENO cont'd

NEW CARNIVORE


Large tooth from new carnivore.

We long suspected there was at least one other large meat eater (at least the size of Suchomimus, 36-feet long) on the scene 110 million years ago because we have on many occasions found its dagger-shaped teeth. These flattened teeth look very different from Suchomimus teeth. Suchomimus teeth resemble crocodile teeth - they are cylindrical in cross-section and hook-shaped - well suited for catching fish.  In fact, the only way to be sure you have a Suchomimus tooth and not a crocodile tooth is to examine the edges for very small serrations, like the serrations found on the teeth of predatory dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus.


Pelvic bone of a new 110 million year old predatory dinosaur.

We are zeroing in on the animal, but are only beginning to make out what it looked like. It probably wasn't as common or didn't frequent the river habitat as much as Suchomimus. The flattened teeth with the wrinkled enamel, and the shape of the skull bone over the eye gave us an early clue that we might be dealing with a fore-runner of Africa's tyrant dinosaur, Carcharodontosaurus, a huge dinosaur that lived 90 million years ago.

One of Gabrielle Lyon's finds while at Camp 1 confirmed these suspicions. We now have several jaw bones with teeth in place, a pelvic girdle, vertebrae - all consistent with an animal that grew to the size of Suchomimus, one that may be an early relative of Carcharodonotosaurus.

We are very excited about this new dinosaur- it would be nice to find more of this theropod, but it is very rare.

NIGERSAURUS

 
The Nigersaurus was a 600 tooth plant eater with shovel shaped head. The team has trenched around this Nigersaurus fossil
and it is ready for a plaster jacket.

One of the most satisfying outcomes of Camp 1 is that we have filled out the skeleton of Nigersaurus, the 600-toothed plant eater we have come to know from our previous discoveries. We are missing only a few bones of the skull, feet and the tip of the tail.

Nigersaurus we now know, is a relative of North America's Jurassic Diplodocus.  It used to be thought that Diplodocus and all of its close relatives (the diplodocoids) died out at the end of the Jurassic. We now know that the group did not go entirely extinct.  One group of these long-necked plant eaters survived into the Cretaceous period on southern continents  like Africa. Nigersaurus  - with its absolutely bizarre jaw adaptations - will shortly be the best known of these Cretaceous descendents.


Partial jaw of a juvenile Nigersaurus.

Nigersaurus was not a very large sauropod as sauropods go. It probably reached a maximum size of  50 feet in length. The discovery of a tiny jaw of a Nigersaurus hatchling, however, was quite a surprise!  All dinosaurs hatched from eggs, and even sauropods like Nigersaurus started out quite small.

We have more than half the field season ahead of us, but as you can imagine with this kind of an exciting start, we are already contemplating how we will prepare, study, describe and announce these new findings.  Many of them will be named as new species and together are giving us the most complete picture of life on Africa during 110 million years ago.

Paul Sereno


 


Written By Gabrielle Lyon - All Photographs by Mike Hettwer unless noted
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