Europe's largest meat-eating dinosaur found on Isle of Wight
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[June 10, 2022]
By Will Dunham
(Reuters) - Fossilized bones discovered on
a rocky seashore on England's Isle of Wight are the remains of a
meat-eating dinosaur that may be larger than any other known from
Europe, a beast that was a cousin of the biggest carnivorous dinosaur
species on record.
Paleontologists said on Thursday they have found parts of the skeleton
of the dinosaur, which lived about 125 million years ago during the
Cretaceous Period, including bones of the back, hips and tail, some limb
fragments but no skull or teeth. Based on the partial remains, they
estimated that the dinosaur exceeded 33 feet (10 meters) long and
perhaps reached much more.
"The size of the specimen is impressive. It is one of the biggest - and
possibly the biggest - known land predator ever to stalk Europe," said
Chris Barker, a University of Southampton doctoral student in
paleontology and lead author of the study published in the journal PeerJ
Life & Environment https://peerj.com/articles/13543.
Based in part on a series of small grooves on the top of the tail
vertebra, they concluded that it belonged to a group of dinosaurs called
spinosaurs that included Spinosaurus, which lived about 95 million years
ago and at about 50 feet (15 meters) long is considered the
longest-known dinosaur predator.
Spinosaurs had elongated skulls reminiscent of crocodiles with lots of
conical teeth - perfect for grasping slippery prey - as well as strong
arms and big claws. They fed upon aquatic prey as well as other
dinosaurs.
Because of the incomplete nature of the remains, the researchers have
not yet given the newly described dinosaur a scientific name, but are
calling it the "White Rock spinosaurid" based on the geological layer
where the bones were found. They believe it is not a member of any
previously identified species.
Meat-eating dinosaurs belonged to a clade called theropods, with each
continent producing immense examples. They were bipedal and the largest
had massive skulls and strong teeth.
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A diagram shows fossil remains of a meat-eating dinosaur dubbed the
"White Rock spinosaurid," dating from about 125 million years ago
during the Cretaceous Period, unearthed on England?s Isle of Wight.
Barker et al/Handout via REUTERS.
Spinosaurus was Africa's largest. Tyrannosaurus rex,
approaching 42 feet (13 meters), was North America's king, while the
similarly sized Giganotosaurus reigned in South America and the
slightly smaller Tarbosaurus in Asia. The largest-known named
theropod from Europe was Torvosaurus, at about 33 feet (10 meters).
The newly described dinosaur might turn out to be as long as T. rex,
according to University of Southampton paleobiologist and study
corresponding author Neil Gostling.
"This one is really big," Gostling said. "Let's hope more fossils
turn up. We would love a skull or teeth."
Looking at the teeth could help researchers better understand this
dinosaur's position on the spinosaur family tree.
The fossils were spotted on the surface along Compton Bay on the
southwestern coast of the Isle of Wight. The dinosaur inhabited a
lagoon environment also populated by various plant-eating dinosaurs
and flying reptiles called pterosaurs. At the time, sea levels were
much higher than today and large parts of Europe were submerged.
The Isle of Wight has become one of Europe's richest locales for
dinosaur remains. The same team of researchers last year announced
the discovery of two other Isle of Wight Cretaceous spinosaurs, both
measuring about 30 feet long (9 meters).
Those finds combined with the latest one buttress their hypothesis
that spinosaurs as a group originated and diversified in western
Europe before expanding elsewhere.
"This new material corroborates our previous work that highlights
Europe as an important region for spinosaur diversification," Barker
said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham in Washington; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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