ADD FAVORITES

 

BOOKMARK US




Login Form






Lost Password?
No account yet? Register

RSS FEEDS

Get our news delivered directly to your desktop-free

Who's Online

We have 14 guests online

USER STATISTICS

679 registered
0 today
0 this week
1 this month

Visitors Counter

Today2715
Yesterday4971
This week36531
This month91557
All4083740
Data since November 3, 2008
1689 Newsletter Subscribers

Announcement

Dear Visitors,

Archaeology Daily News is an Amazon Associates Program member.You can buy archaeology related books securely at our Amazon Bookstore by clicking the Bookstore menu item on the vertical menu in the left of our webpages (Link: Archaeolody Daily News Bookstore).

Archaeology Daily News earns revenues from Amazon book sales.

We will make donations to UNICEF (United Nations Children's Fund) for 50% of our Amazon earnings. We will publish our donations at Archaeology Daily News.

Thank you very much for your support!

Best Regards,

Archaeology Daily News



Triceratops Ancestor Discovered E-mail
February, 01 2011
 

This page is viewed 737 times

CBS News

An enormous horned dinosaur, weighing as much as an African elephant with a skull extending about 8 feet (2.4 meters), was recently discovered by a paleontologist within the pages of a scientific journal article.

An illustration of Titanoceratops, thought to be the ancestor of the Triceratops dinosaur.

The dinosaur, dubbed Titanoceratops ouranos, lived in the American southwest during the late Cretaceous period around 74 million years ago. The horned dinosaur represents the earliest member of the Triceratops lineage, called the Triceratopsini, suggesting the group evolved its large size more than 5 million years earlier than previously thought, according to Yale University paleontologist Nicholas Longrich, who made the discovery, which will be detailed in an upcoming issue of the journal Cretaceous Research.

Until now, the oldest known member of the Triceratopsini was the 68-million-year-old Eotriceratops xerinsularis found in Alberta.

Longrich made the discovery while searching through scientific papers. He came across a description of a partial skeleton of a dinosaur discovered in New Mexico in 1941, which went untouched until 1995 when it was identified as Pentaceratops sternbergi. When the missing part of its frill, a signature feature of the horned dinosaurs, was reconstructed for display in the Sam Noble Oklahoma Museum of Natural History, it was modeled after Pentaceratops.

"When I looked at the skeleton more closely, I realized it was just too different from the other known Pentaceratops to be a member of the species," Longrich said, adding that the specimen's size indicated it likely weighed about twice as much as an adult Pentaceratops.

The new species is very similar to Triceratops, but with a thinner frill, longer nose and slightly bigger horns, Longrich said.

Longrich thinks Titanoceratops is the ancestor of both Triceratops and Torosaurus, and that the latter two split several millions years after Titanoceratops evolved. "This skeleton is exactly what you would expect their ancestor to look like," Longrich said.

Next, Longrich hopes other paleontologists will find fossil skeletons of Titanoceratops that include intact frills to help confirm the differences between Titanoceratops and Pentaceratops.



Add this page to your favorite Social Bookmarking websites
Reddit! Del.icio.us! JoomlaVote! Google! Live! Facebook! StumbleUpon! Yahoo! Free social bookmarking plugins and extensions for Joomla! websites!

Related News:



Users' Comments  RSS feed comment
 

 

No comment posted

Add your comment



mXcomment 1.0.9 © 2007-2013 - visualclinic.fr
License Creative Commons - Some rights reserved
< Prev   Next >



Archaeology Daily News published 8523 news articles since November 3, 2008


MOST COMMENTED NEWS

© 2013 Archaeology Daily News