New dinosaur species discovered in Canadian museum

New dinosaur species discovered in Canadian museum
New dinosaur species discovered in Canadian museum



A new species of dinosaur has been discovered by a British paleontologist in a Canadian museum.

Dr Nick Longrich was examining fossilised bones from two horned dinosaurs, which had been kept in the Canadian Museum of Nature for 75 years.

The fossils had previously been classified as Anchiceratops and Chasmosaurus, species known to be from Canada.

But after analysing the fossils, Dr Longrich realised they more closely resembled dinosaurs from the American south west. Words: PA

One represents a new species of Pentaceratops, named Pentaceratops aquilonius - a buffalo-sized plant eating dinosaur from around 75 million years ago.

The second appears to be a new species of Kosmoceratops, a dinosaur with an ornate skull from Utah, though more complete fossils are needed to confirm this.

Dr Longrich, from the University of Bath, said his find revealed dinosaur species from the region were much more diverse than previously though.

"We thought we had discovered most of the species, but it seems there are many undiscovered dinosaurs left," Dr Longrich, from the university's Department of Biology & Biochemistry, said.

"The total dinosaur diversity must have been extraordinarily high. We've really only just scratched the surface."

Pentaceratops was a smaller cousin of Triceratops, belonging to a group of large, horned dinosaurs with a long brow horn and elongate frills called the Chasmosaurinae.

The dinosaurs were based in western North America at the end of the Cretaceous Period, around 75 million years ago.

Up until now, ten Chasmosaur species have been recognised from that period, with distinct species occurring in the northern and southern parts of the continent.

Dr Longrich believes that although distinct northern and southern provinces existed, there was exchange between them.

Dinosaurs would spread from one part of the continent to the other, then diverge to form new species.

Competition between the different species then prevented the dinosaurs from moving between the northern and southern regions.

"The distribution of dinosaur species was very different from the patterns seen in living mammals," Dr Longrich said.

"In living mammals, there tend to be relatively few large species, and they have large ranges. With Cretaceous dinosaurs, we see a lot of large species in a single habitat.

"They also tend to be very regional - as you move from one habitat to another you get a completely different set of species."

The patterns help explain why paleontologists keep finding more species, as they discover them when examining different habitats.

Dr Longrich believes such patterns are caused by dinosaur biology.

"In this sense, dinosaur biology seems quite different from mammal biology," he said.

"It could be that mammals are more intelligent and so they tend to have more flexible behaviour, and adapt their behaviour to their habitat

"On the other hand, dinosaurs may have had to adapt themselves physically to survive in a different habitat, and evolved new species."

Dr Longrich's study appears in the academic journal Cretaceous Research.

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