Modest
Chinese dinosaur was forerunner to later horned behemoths
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[December 10, 2015]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - With their
elaborate horns, bony neck frills and bulldozer-like bodies, members of
the horned dinosaur group like Triceratops were among Earth's most
impressive beasts during the Cretaceous Period near the end of the age
of dinosaurs.
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But a newly discovered fossil of one of the oldest-known members
of this plant-eating group illustrates that the forerunners of these
behemoths were much more modest creatures.
Scientists on Wednesday announced the discovery in the Gobi Desert
in western China's Xinjiang Province of the remains of a
spaniel-sized dinosaur they named Hualianceratops that lived about
160 million years ago late in the Jurassic Period.
At about 3 feet long (1 meter), it was much smaller than later
members of the group, formally called ceratopsians. Triceratops,
which lived alongside Tyrannosaurus rex in western North America
about 67 million years ago, exceeded 30 feet (9 meters) in length.
Hualianceratops, meaning "ornamental face," did not have horns and
walked on two legs, as opposed to four like the big later
ceratopsians. It had a relatively large, triangular head, with a
very small neck frill. Like all ceratopsians, it boasted a beak for
cropping vegetation.
"It would look very odd, with its relatively big head and running
about on its hind legs," said George Washington University
paleontologist Catherine Forster. "It's not usual today to see
animals walking on their hind legs. Humans are very unusual in that
respect. But it was very common in the dinosaur world."
Ceratopsians did not become quadrupedal and did not acquire their
trademark horns until tens of millions of years later.
Hualianceratops resided in the same time and place as the similar
dinosaur Yinlong, which until now had been considered the
earliest-known ceratopsian. Hualianceratops was more heavily built,
"like a chunky version of Yinlong," Forster said.
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Finding both of them shows there was more ceratopsian diversity at
the time than previously known. The two lived alongside an array of
plant-eating and meat-eating dinosaurs, turtles, crocodilians and
primitive mammals.
The Hualianceratops remains comprise a "slightly bashed-up partial
skull" and a hind foot, Forster said.
Dinosaurs, not including their bird descendants, disappeared about
66 million years ago. The horned dinosaurs were an important
herbivore group, particularly in North America, during the dinosaur
age's twilight. Many had numerous horns above the nose, eyes and on
the cheeks, as well as horns and other ornamentation on their neck
frills.
The research appeared in the journal PLOS ONE.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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