Students discover new species of raptor dinosaur
19 March 2010
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A new species of dinosaur, a relative of the famous Velociraptor, has been discovered in Inner Mongolia by two PhD students.
The exceptionally
well preserved dinosaur, named Linheraptor
exquisitus, is the first near-complete skeleton of its kind to be found in
the Gobi desert since 1972, and will help
scientists work out the appearance of other closely related dinosaur species.
Linheraptor is in the Dromaeosauridae family of the carnivorous theropod dinosaurs and lived during the Late Cretaceous period. In addition to Linheraptor and Velociraptor, theropod dinosaurs include charismatic meat-eaters like Tyrannosaurus rex and modern birds.
The two PhD students, Michael Pittman from UCL and Jonah Choiniere from George Washington University (GWU), found the dinosaur sticking out of a cliff face during a field project in Inner Mongolia, China. Their research is published online today in the journal Zootaxa.
"Jonah saw
a claw protruding from the cliff face. He carefully removed it and handed it to
me. We went through its features silently but he wanted my identification
first. I told him it was from a carnivorous dinosaur and when he agreed I'm
surprised nobody in London
heard us shouting," said Michael Pittman, a PhD student in UCL Earth Sciences who was the co-discoverer of the dinosaur.
"I've
always wanted to discover a dinosaur since I was a kid, and I've never given up
on the idea. It was amazing that my first discovery was from a Velociraptor relative. My thesis is on
the evolution and biomechanics of dinosaur tails but the carnivorous dinosaurs
are my favourite and my specialty," he added.
At approximately 2.5 metres long and 25 kilograms, the researchers believe Linheraptor would have been a fast, agile predator that preyed on small horned dinosaurs related to Triceratops. Like other dromaeosaurids, it possessed a large 'killing claw' on the foot, which may have been used to capture prey. Within the Dromaeosauridae family, Linheraptor is most closely related to another recently discovered species Tsaagan mangas.
Linheraptor differs from all other dromaeosaurs because of a triangular hole in front of the eye socket called the antorbital fenestra, which is a space in the skull that sinuses would have occupied. In Linheraptor this triangular hole is divided into two cavities - one of which is particularly big.
"This is a really beautiful fossil and it documents a transitional stage in dromaeosaurid evolution," said Dr Xu Xing, Professor of Palaeontology at the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology & Paleoanthropology (IVPP), China.
Linheraptor was found in rocks of the
Wulansuhai Formation, part
of a group of red sandstone rocks found in Inner Mongolia, China
during a field expedition by the researchers in 2008. It is the fifth dromaeosaurid discovered in
these rocks, which are famous for their preservation of uncrushed, complete
skeletons.
The research was done as part of the Inner Mongolia Research project, led by Dr Xu, which aims to better understand the Late Cretaceous ecosystem of Inner Mongolia, China which is analogous but less well studied than the well-known Late Cretaceous ecosytem of Outer Mongolia. The research was funded by the Geological Society of London, the US National Science Foundation, the Chinese National Science Foundation, and George Washington University.
Media contact: Clare Ryan
Image: Reconstruction of Linheraptor by Matt van Rooijen
UCL context
Research undertaken at UCL Earth Sciences spans a diverse range of activities including crustal processes, Earth and planetary evolution, mineral physics, palaeobiology and palaeoclimatology, polar observation and modelling, natural hazards, environmental geochemistry and sedimentology.
The department's teaching, reflecting the diversity of its research, encompasses a wide range of undergraduate and taught graduate programmes together with an active body of graduate research students.