'River monster': Huge African dinosaur Spinosaurus thrived in the water
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[May 01, 2020]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The huge African
predator Spinosaurus spent much of its life in the water, propelled by
a paddle-like tail while hunting large fish - a "river monster,"
according to scientists, that showed that some dinosaurs invaded the
aquatic realm.
Scientists on Wednesday announced the discovery of fossil bones from the
tail of Spinosaurus in southeastern Morocco that provided a deeper
understanding of the appearance, lifestyle and capabilities of the
longest meat-eating dinosaur on record.
"Spinosaurus had a highly specialized tail - a propulsive structure that
would have allowed this river monster to actively pursue prey in the
water column," said University of Detroit Mercy paleontologist and
anatomist Nizar Ibrahim, lead author of the study published in the
journal Nature.
Spinosaurus, which lived 95 million years ago during the Cretaceous
Period, was a highly unusual dinosaur, and not just because of its
staggering dimensions - up to 50 feet (15 meters) long and seven tons.
The anatomy of Spinosaurus had remained mysterious for decades after
crucial fossils were destroyed during World War Two until the 2008
discovery of the Morocco skeleton, with the additional tail bones dug up
since 2015.
Its tail was flexible with a large surface area thanks to a series of
tall neural spines - different from the stiff and tapering tails of
other carnivorous dinosaurs like Tyrannosaurus rex - indicating
Spinosaurus and its close relatives engaged in tail-propelled locomotion
unlike any other dinosaurs.
Laboratory experiments in which a plastic model of the Spinosaurus tail
was attached to a robotic swimming device showed that the tail could
move laterally to create thrust and power the animal through water like
a crocodile, said Harvard University fish biologist and biomechanist
George Lauder, a study co-author.
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A reconstruction of the tail skeleton of Spinosaurus (missing bones
shown in white) at top, cross sections through the tail showing
changes in the vertebrae, tail volume, and arrangement of major
muscles at center and the new look of Spinosaurus (black, soft
parts/body outline; red, bones collected in 2008 by a local fossil
collector; green, bones from recent scientific excavations; yellow,
bone fragments collected in the debris around the main excavation
area) at bottom are seen in an illustration provided April 29, 2020.
Marco Auditore, Gabriele Bindellini/Handout via REUTERS.
This indicates Spinosaurus terrorized rivers and river banks as a
semi-aquatic animal, not merely wading into the water waiting for
fish to swim by. It may have eaten huge fish, including sharks.
"This discovery overturns decades-old ideas that non-bird dinosaurs
were restricted to terrestrial environments," said Harvard
University vertebrate paleontologist and biomechanist Stephanie
Pierce, a study co-author. "So, yes, we believe that this discovery
does indeed revolutionize our understanding of dinosaur biology."
Spinosaurus still was able to move on land and lay eggs there,
perhaps walking on four legs rather than two like other meat-eating
dinosaurs.
"But it had so many adaptations to an aquatic existence - nostrils
high on the skull and further back from the tip, flat bottomed-toe
bones and claws, dense and thickened bone for buoyancy control, and
this newly discovered tail form - that it would have been at least
as aquatic as Nile Crocodiles," University of Portsmouth
paleontologist and study co-author David Martill said.
"It just might topple T. rex," Pierce said, "as the most famous and
exciting meat-eating dinosaur."
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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