Tanzanian 'beast' sheds light on gigantic
dinosaur group
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[February 15, 2019]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A relatively
complete skeleton of a long-necked, long-tailed plant-eater excavated
from a rocky cliff above a Tanzanian river is providing insight into the
early evolution of a dinosaur group that later included Earth's
largest-ever land animals.
Scientists on Wednesday announced the discovery of fossils of a dinosaur
called Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia that measured roughly 26 feet (8 meters)
long, weighed about one ton, lived between 110 and 100 million years ago
and was an early and comparatively small member of the group called
titanosaurs.
Titanosaurs, which walked on four pillar-like legs, first appeared
earlier in the Cretaceous Period, perhaps 125 million years ago. By the
time an asteroid impact caused a mass extinction that doomed the
dinosaurs 66 million years ago, titanosaurs had achieved staggering
dimensions. For example, Argentina's Patagotitan was about 120 feet (37
meters) long and weighed 70 tons.
"Mnyamawamtuka is important as it is a relatively complete animal from
the early part of the titanosaurian diversification. Thus, it provides a
critical look at the group before the widespread diversification around
the planet," Ohio University anatomy professor Patrick O'Connor said.
Mnyamawamtuka means "beast of the Mtuka" because it was unearthed near
the Mtuka River bed in southwestern Tanzania.
"This excavation was fairly involved, as the fossils were discovered
eroding out of a vertical cliff surface about 20 feet (6 meters) above
the dry river bed," O'Connor said.
"At first, we worked merely to stabilize the falling rock and fossils,
with later efforts involving climbing ropes and teams of skilled
excavators. It is a fantastic setting, with monkeys, a variety of
hornbills and other birds, every type of insect under the sun, complete
with a very cool dinosaur skeleton," O'Connor added.
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The Cretaceous Period dinosaur Mnyamawamtuka in its environmental
setting is seen in this illustration released in Athens, Ohio, U.S.,
February 13, 2019. Mark Witton/Handout via REUTERS
Some of the approximately 60 identified titanosaur species are known
only from scrappy remains. Scientists have 45 percent of
Mnyamawamtuka's skeleton - pretty good, as dinosaur fossils go -
including numerous vertebrae, front and hind limb bones, ribs and
teeth, but not its skull.
One distinctive trait was the slight heart shape of Mnyamawamtuka's
tail vertebrae, which "perhaps played a role in stiffening the tail
from side-to-side," O'Connor said.
"It was not fully grown yet, as evidenced by unfused parts of the
skeleton. So, we are not sure of the maximum adult size at this
point," O'Connor said.
Mnyamawamtuka lived in a warm, semi-arid setting in what is now
southern central Africa.
The research, backed by the U.S. National Science Foundation, was
published in the journal PLOS ONE.
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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