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Portellsaurus sosbaynati: New Dinosaur Species Identified in Spain

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

An artist’s impression of Portellsaurus sosbaynati. Image credit: Santos-Cubedo et al., doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253599.

A new genus and species of styracosternan hadrosaurid dinosaur has been identified from a fossilized jawbone found in the Spanish province of Castellón.

The newly-identified dinosaur species roamed Earth between 130 and 129 million years ago (Barremian stage of the Cretaceous period).

Scientifically named Portellsaurus sosbaynati, the ancient creature was a herbivore.

It belongs to Styracosterna, a subgroup of dinosaurs in the clade Iguanodontia that contains the hadrosaurids and all species more closely related to them than to the group Camptosauridae.

Portellsaurus sosbaynati is diagnosed by two autapomorphic features as well as a unique combination of characters,” said Dr. Andrés Santos-Cubedo of Jaume I University and his colleagues from Spain.

“The autapomorphies include: the absence of a bulge along the ventral margin directly ventral to the base of the coronoid process and the presence of a deep oval cavity on the medial surface of the mandibular adductor fossa below the eleventh-twelfth tooth position.”

The right dentary of Portellsaurus sosbaynati: (A) labial, (B) lingual, and (C) occlusal views, (D) enlargement (2x) of a dental crown fragment at the tooth row. Scale bar – 10 cm. Image credit: Santos-Cubedo et al., doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253599.

The fossilized remains of Portellsaurus sosbaynati were recovered from the Margas de Mirambell Formation at the locality of Portell in eastern Spain.

The specimen — a nearly complete right dentary — was from a large individual about 6-8 m (20-26 feet) in length.

Portellsaurus sosbaynati is definitely the first styracosternan dinosaur species identified from the Mirambell Formation in the Morella sub-basin (Maestrat Basin, eastern Spain),” the paleontologists said.

The phylogenetic analysis revealed that the new species is more closely related to Ouranosaurus nigeriensis and Bolong yixianensis – two hadrosaurs from the Early Cretaceous of Niger and China, respectively — than to other hadrosaurid dinosaurs.

“The recognition of Portellsaurus sosbaynati indicates that the Iberian Peninsula was home to a highly diverse assemblage of medium-to-large bodied styracosternan hadrosauriforms during the Early Cretaceous epoch,” the authors said.

Their paper was published online in the journal PLoS ONE.

_____

A. Santos-Cubedo et al. 2021. A new styracosternan hadrosauroid (Dinosauria: Ornithischia) from the Early Cretaceous of Portell, Spain. PLoS ONE 16 (7): e0253599; doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0253599

Source: www.sci-news.com/

Dinosaur Fossil Identified as Japan’s Largest Ornithopod

Wednesday, July 14, 2021

An image of Hadrosauroidea that existed in the late Cretaceous Period (Provided by the Nagasaki prefectural board of education and the Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum)

Researchers have determined that a fossil found in the layers of a local beach is the shoulder blade of a 9-meter-long ornithopod dinosaur, one of the largest in Japan and possibly a new species.

The Nagasaki prefectural board of education and the Fukui Prefectural Dinosaur Museum, which have been conducting archaeological research together since fiscal 2012, released their latest findings on July 12.

The shoulder blade fossil was discovered in May 2016 in a layer of earth from the late Cretaceous Period on the west coast of Nagasaki Peninsula in the city of Nagasaki.

The stratum of earth, known as Mitsuse-so, is approximately 81 million years old.

Heavy machinery was used to excavate the fossil a year after it was discovered.

The repair and restoration work began in 2018 and was completed recently.

Kazunori Miyata, the museum’s chief researcher, said the discovery is an invaluable piece of material in the study of the “ecology of dinosaurs living in groups in Nagasaki in the late Cretaceous Period.”

The fossil is 90 centimeters long and 20 cm wide, and curves gently along the dinosaur’s thorax. The fossil is in near-perfect condition.

Researchers concluded that the bone is a left-side shoulder blade from an advanced Hadrosauroidea based on its shape and length, among other factors.

The Hadrosauroidea was a bipedal herbivore, a typical ornithopod that lived in the Cretaceous period.

The oldest Hadrosauroidea fossil in Japan is one from a Koshisaurus discovered in Katsuyama, Fukui Prefecture, estimated to be approximately 120 million years old.

Other late-Cretaceous Period discoveries in Japan are a 72-million-year-old Kamuysaurus fossil in Hokkaido and a Yamatosaurus fossil dug up on Awajishima island in Hyogo Prefecture that measures about 7-8 meters in length.

Fossils from a large Tyrannosaurus and small theropod dinosaurs have also been discovered in the Mitsuse-so stratum.

A replica of the new fossil discovery will be displayed at Nagasaki city hall, the museum in Fukui, and in other places, starting from July 16.

Source: www.asahi.com/

5 Best Dinosaur Mods For Minecraft

Tuesday, July 13, 2021

The Torvosaurus (Image via u/Lauge1200 on Reddit)

Many Minecraft players, playing the game for a long time, might feel bored of the everyday survival experience. To spice things up, they can install mods in the game. Mods are external programs that can change the look of vanilla Minecraft from the inside out.

Modders are one of the most significant parts of the Minecraft community, as many Minecrafters enjoy playing the reshaped versions of the game. Many famous Minecraft mods have unique mobs, such as dinosaurs and dragons. This article covers the best mods to install that will add dinosaurs to Minecraft.

Some of the best Dinosaur mods in Minecraft

1) JurassiCraft

This mod will add ten different dinosaurs to Minecraft, and as it is still actively being updated, there is a chance that players might see even more dinosaurs in future updates. Along with dinosaurs, this mod adds many new items, some of which are prehistoric plants, fossils, decorations, and vehicles.

2) Prehistoric Eclipse

Image via CurseForge

Prehistoric Eclipse is still in early beta, so it may be slightly unstable. As of now, there are a total of 15 different dinosaurs, and most of them can mate as well.

Baby dinosaurs can be found in nests and tamed with bones. Carnivorous dinosaurs will always be aggressive towards the player. Minecrafters can use a hunter's bow to shoot Dakotaraptor arrows, which deal extra two damage than a regular arrow.

3) Dinosaur Dimension

Image via CurseForge

In this cool dinosaur-based mod, players can explore a different dimension where the eight different dinosaurs live. To enter the dinosaur dimension, players need to create a portal using Cave Painting blocks and ignite it with time flint.

4) PaleoCraft

This mod aims to add scientifically accurate representations of dinosaurs to Minecraft. Along with dinosaurs, Paleocraft introduces some other prehistoric creatures such as megalodon as well. Players looking for a simple dinosaur mod must try this mod, and they will be amazed by the high-definition textures of the dinosaurs.

5) The Lost Worlds

In this mod, players are taken back to the Permian age between 299 and 251 million. The Lost Worlds mod adds many features, some of which allow its players to build their own Jurassic park with items such as DNA extractors, personal computers, and fossil grinders.

Source: www.sportskeeda.com/

Top 10 Best Lego Games

Wednesday, July 7, 2021

There are a lot of LEGO games. I mean, a lot. So many. Hell, every franchise has its own LEGO game now, save for the Real Housewives (unless...?). So where do you start on your journey into the LGU (LEGO Gaming Universe, for you noobs)? Your Teen Lingo-savvy friend is here to help with a road map to the 10 best LEGO games of all time.

1. LEGO WORLDS – Nintendo Switch

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  • 100% suitable with usa nintendo change console
  • Discover. uncover. create. discover and uncover the surprises inside lego worlds uncover hidden treasures in environments that vary from the enjoyable to the fantastical make your worlds come to life with customizable characters, each pleasant and fearsome race, soar, zoom, and journey on a wide range of autos and creatures from diggers and helicopters to horses and dragons
  • Area free australia
  • 100% suitable with usa nintendo account
  • Create and customise your personal lego world construct any world you may think about utilizing the brick-by-brick editor device and prefabricated lego constructions modify terrain shortly and simply with the multi-tool. customise your characters in all kinds of outfits and choices. play with a choose variety of real-life lego units, taken from the traditional and present lego themes!

2. LEGO Jurassic World (Nintendo Switch)

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  • Wreak havoc as lego dinosaurs
  • Populate and discover isla nublar and isla sorna
  • All earlier dlcs launched for the sport together with jurassic park trilogy #1 and #2
  • Relive key moments from all 4 jurassic movies
  • Customise your personal dinosaur assortment
  • Single joycon help for native participant co-op

3. LEGO Marvel Collection – PlayStation 4

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  • Lego marvel’s avengers: leap into the marvel cinematic universe with characters and storylines from a few of the critically acclaimed movies and extra
  • Lego marvel tremendous heroes: gamers take management of an enormous roster of characters as they unite to cease loki and a bunch of different marvel villains from assembling a super-weapon able to destroying the world
  • Lego marvel tremendous heroes 2: be a part of your favourite tremendous heroes and tremendous villains from totally different eras and realities as they go face to face with the time touring kang the conqueror within the all new, authentic journey

4. LEGO Star Wars 501st Legion Clone Troopers 75280 Building Kit

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  • This lego star wars constructing equipment consists of four lego minifigures: three new-for-2020 501st clone troopers and a 501st jet trooper, with jetpack aspect, plus 2 battle droids and weapons for battles
  • This 285-piece building playset makes an excellent birthday current or vacation reward for girls and boys aged 7+; the two autos will also be pushed within the lego star wars: the skywalker saga online game
  • Youngsters can role-play as 501st legion clone troopers and relive thrilling motion from star wars: the clone wars with this lego star wars motion set (75280), that includes an at-rt walker and barc speeder
  • The at-rt walker has posable legs, a stud shooter, attachment factors for a blaster and electrobinoculars aspect, and the barc speeder has 2 stud shooters to encourage artistic play
  • The compact, strong lego star wars at-rt walker measures over 7” (17cm) excessive, three.5” (9cm) lengthy and 3” (8cm) large – a handy measurement to slide into a baby’s backpack with the barc speeder prepared for play wherever they go

5. LEGO Universe (Original Game Soundtrack)

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  • With 2 participant co-op, mates can discover the sprawling open-world metropolis that’s lego metropolis
  • Be a part of the chase. in lego metropolis undercover, play as chase mccain, a police officer who’s been tasked with going undercover to search out the infamous – and lately escaped – legal rex fury
  • Lego metropolis undercover brings collectively witty, authentic storytelling with signature lego humor to create a fun-filled expertise for gamers of all ages to get pleasure from

6. LEGO City Undercover – Nintendo Switch

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  • Gamers can full motion packed facet missions and defeat iconic tremendous villains that management town districts in an open hub world that gives an thrilling free play expertise
  • Gamers should work collectively and mix the parr household’s iconic skills and distinctive powers to construct huge lego constructions
  • Gamers can modify their character’s look and skills utilizing a customise themed to edna e mode

7. LEGO Disney Pixar’s The Incredibles – Nintendo Switch

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  • Customise your personal dinosaur assortment: accumulate lego amber and experiment with dna to create utterly authentic dinosaurs
  • Wreak havoc as lego dinosaurs: select from 20 dinosaurs, together with the pleasant triceratops, lethal raptor, and even the mighty to rex
  • Discover isle nobler and isle saran: put your distinctive dinosaur creations into paddocks as you full free play missions

8. LEGO The Lord of the Rings

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This game came out of complete left field, a decade after the original movies released. Now, there have been some pretty damn impressive Lord of the Rings games, like Shadow of Mordor, all those glorious PS2 titles, and the upcoming Gollum game, but few—in fact, none—were as colorful and vibrant as this one. It was just a classic LEGO beat 'em up and collect-a-thon, re-skinned with LOTR characters. It also opened the door for Gandalf to become one of the main characters in LEGO Dimensions, fighting alongside Batman, and anything that helped that ridiculous fanfic come true is good in our books.

9. LEGO Ludo Game

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Create a classic board game from LEGO bricks, then bring on the minifigure teams and let the game begin! This fun LEGO Iconic 40198 Ludo Game comes with 16 minifigure players divided into 4 teams and a colorful play area with 4 team bases, each depicting a different season, plus a buildable number spinner. This set also includes easy-to-follow game rules in written and picture form. Includes 16 player minifigures, 4 on each team. Features a buildable Ludo board divided into 4 areas, each depicting a different season, plus a buildable number spinner. Comes with easy-to-follow game rules in written and picture form. Board measures over 9” (25cm) square.

10. LEGO Star Wars: The Force Awakens

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LEGO Star Wars is where it’s at. Force Awakens is not. Not that this game was bad—it was pretty decent—but compared to the other LEGO Star Wars titles, it felt lackluster. The game gave the LEGO Star Wars-verse a nice graphical update and some more polished controls, but it still felt like far less content than the previous games. If you're looking for some more LEGO Star Wars to gear up for the new game, then it's worth a play though.

Source: https://www.admet.net/

How Do We Know Birds Are Dinosaurs?

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

Illustration: Benjamin Currie

Birds aren’t descended from dinosaurs. They are dinosaurs.

Ferocious tyrannosaurs and towering sauropods are long gone, but dinosaurs continue to frolic in our midst. We’re talking about birds, of course, yet it’s not entirely obvious why we should consider birds to be bona fide dinos. Here are the many reasons why.

Make no mistake, birds are legit dinosaurs, and not some evolutionary offshoot. All non-avian dinosaurs were wiped out following the asteroid-induced mass extinction 66 million years ago, but some species of birds—probably ground-dwelling birds—managed to survive, and they wasted no time in taking over once their relatives were gone.

“Those little guys singing outside your window are the dinosaurs we have left these days,” Adam Smith, curator at Clemson University’s Campbell Geology Museum, explained in an email. “Birds are just one type of dinosaur. Saying ‘birds descended from dinosaurs’ is akin to saying that people descended from mammals. Simply put, all birds are dinosaurs, but not all dinosaurs are birds.”

This warbler doesn’t mind being referred to as a dinosaur. Image: U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service

That birds are somehow connected to dinosaurs is hardly a recent revelation. In the late 19th century, English naturalist Thomas Henry Huxley dared to suggest that birds evolved from dinosaurs. As science writer Riley Black wrote in 2010, his ideas about the origin of birds “were not a perfect anticipation of our current knowledge,” but Huxley, an adept anatomist, was clearly onto something.

Indeed, scientists have since identified a host of features that comfortably position as birds as dinosaurs in the phylogenetic tree. Kate Lyons, an assistant professor at the University of Nebraska’s Lincoln School of Biological Sciences, says there “isn’t just one smoking gun” that allows paleontologists to say birds are dinosaurs, as there are “multiple pieces of evidence” that point to this conclusion, as she wrote to me in an email.

Paleontologist Steven Brussatte from the University of Edinburgh says we know birds are dinosaurs by applying the same reasoning that tells us bats are mammals.

Look at this dinosaur. Specifically, a brown booby. Image: NOAA/NMFS/OPR

“Yes, birds are small, and have feathers, and wings, and fly, and that is different from the image of dinosaurs we’re used to,” he wrote in an email. “Bats are the mammalian analogy—they are small, have wings, and fly, and they don’t look anything like a dog or elephant or primate, but they are mammals nonetheless.”

Indeed, bats feature many traits exclusive to mammals, like hair, molar teeth, three tiny ear bones, and the ability to feed young with milk. Likewise, birds have features that are only seen in theropod dinosaurs, Brussatte explained.

Like feathers.

Indeed, while there’s no single “smoking gun” to pin birds down as dinosaurs, the presence of feathers is probably the most smoking gunniest thing of all. The fossil record is filled with examples of feathered non-avian dinosaurs, and because feathers are unique to birds, scientists are able to link them both together as dinosaurs.

Skeptics may argue that the emergence of feathers in both birds and non-avian dinosaurs is a consequence of convergent evolution, in which similar traits appear independently in unrelated species. Smith says convergent evolution is unlikely in this case because “many of the non-avian dinosaurs that were found with preserved feathers are the exact species that were already, independently hypothesized to be close relatives of birds,” including Velociraptors and Sinosauropteryx.

Artist’s interpretation of Velociraptor mongoliensis.Illustration: Fred Wierum (Fair Use)

To which he added: “Feathers are ridiculously complex structures, and while convergent evolution frequently results in similar structures—and even entire animals—that appear on the surface to be quite alike, there aren’t any examples of convergent evolution duplicating structures on that scale, with that sort of fidelity.”

Phylogenetics—the study of the evolutionary relationships between species—provides further evidence that birds are dinosaurs, as Andre Rowe, a PhD student from the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol, explained in an email. With all due respect to Jurassic Park, paleontologists aren’t able to extract and analyze ancient dinosaur DNA, but they can examine the key characteristics shared between species as indicated by their skeletons and anatomy. Based on these key characteristics, scientists “can say with near certainty that birds belong to the theropod dinosaur lineage,” said Rowe, in reference to meat-eating dinosaurs like T. rexAllosaurus, and Compsognathus. Importantly, skeletons of theropods and birds show “no sudden changes in their evolutionary relationship, but rather a smooth transition over millions of years,” he added.

“Taking a trip back in time, we can trace the evolution of the basic bird body plan all the way back to some of the earliest dinosaurs,” wrote Kristi Curry Rogers, a vertebrate paleontologist at Macalester College in Minnesota, in an email. “Just like dinosaurs, birds walk with their legs held directly underneath their bodies, and dinos gave birds an extra little boost in growth rates.”

All birds are dinosaurs, but not all dinosaurs are birds. Here, a Tyrannosaurus skeleton is mounted next to a Triceratops skeleton at the Los Angeles Natural History Museum.Image: Matthew Dillon (Fair Use)

Holly Woodward Ballard, an associate professor of paleontology and anatomy at the University of Oklahoma, put it this way: “We know birds are dinosaurs because they share more characteristics with extinct dinosaurs than other living animal groups do.”

Indeed, there are many other features to consider—things like “wishbones, bones hollowed out by air sacs, and wrists that can rotate,” allowing dinosaurs to “fold their arms up against their bodies,” according to Brussatte.

In an email, paleontologist and evolutionary biologist Jessica Theodor from the University of Calgary described these and other dino-specific features. For example, the structure that allows birds to bend their hands backward at the wrist, which they do to fold their wings, is also found in the arms of wingless coelurosaurs, and biologists can trace the modification of this structure “through theropod evolution,” she explained.

Comparison between the air sacs of Majungasaurus and a duck. Graphic: Zina Deretsky/NSF

Kat Schroeder, a PhD student from the Department of Biology at the University of New Mexico, described the fusion of certain vertebrae into the synsacrum and pygostyle as one of the most significant evolutionary adaptations in birds.

“The synsacrum is the fusion of the vertebrae over the hips, which stiffens the back and helps with flight, and the pygostyle is a fusion of the last caudal vertebrae that supports tail feathers, which is actually found in some non-avian dinosaurs like Oviraptorosaurs and Ornithomimosaurs which may have had feather fans instead of long tails or fans at the tips of their tails,” she wrote in an email.

“Birds have small flanges on their ribs, called uncinate processes, that provide some mechanical advantage to the breathing muscles of the rib cage,” and they’re also found in oviraptors and dromaeosaurs, as Theodor explained. What’s more, “bird skeletons have a number of other structural similarities to dinosaurs in the skeleton, all of which place them together in phylogenetic analyses,” she said.

Evidence of brooding amongst some dinosaurs, in which animals rest over their nests to keep their eggs warm and protected, is a behavior seen in modern birds, as Rowe reminded me. Also, dinosaurs and birds both used gizzard stones (stones that are swallowed to aid in digestion), “as the stones would grind up food that had already been ingested,” he said.

As I mentioned earlier, scientists can’t study ancient dinosaur DNA, but they can study modern dinosaur DNA.

“The evidence that birds are really just tiny little dinosaurs that learned to fly comes from the dinosaur fossil record as well as from the bodies and genomes of living birds,” Curry Rogers explained. “When we look at modern birds, we can see little mementos of their more ferocious history locked deep inside their genes—extinct developmental programs for building longer tails and teeth.”

To which she added: “It’s all right there—written in the bones and bodies of dinosaurs, living and extinct!”

So the next time a hummingbird comes to your feeder, feel free to greet the tiny bird as a visiting dinosaur. You can likewise claim to have tasted dinosaurs after munching on some chicken wings, or that you were attacked by a dinosaur when a goose frightened you away from her nest. And when the Toronto Blue Jays face off against the Baltimore Orioles, you’re totally good to refer to the matchup as the battle of the dinos.

It’ll sound strange, but you have the science to back you up.

Source: https://gizmodo.com/

How Do We Know Birds Are Dinosaurs?

Sunday, July 11, 2021

Illustration: Benjamin Currie

Birds aren’t descended from dinosaurs. They are dinosaurs.

Ferocious tyrannosaurs and towering sauropods are long gone, but dinosaurs continue to frolic in our midst. We’re talking about birds, of course, yet it’s not entirely obvious why we should consider birds to be bona fide dinos. Here are the many reasons why.

Make no mistake, birds are legit dinosaurs, and not some evolutionary offshoot. All non-avian dinosaurs were wiped out following the asteroid-induced mass extinction 66 million years ago, but some species of birds—probably ground-dwelling birds—managed to survive, and they wasted no time in taking over once their relatives were gone.

“Those little guys singing outside your window are the dinosaurs we have left these days,” Adam Smith, curator at Clemson University’s Campbell Geology Museum, explained in an email. “Birds are just one type of dinosaur. Saying ‘birds descended from dinosaurs’ is akin to saying that people descended from mammals. Simply put, all birds are dinosaurs, but not all dinosaurs are birds.”

 

That birds are somehow connected to dinosaurs is hardly a recent revelation. In the late 19th century, English naturalist Thomas Henry Huxley dared to suggest that birds evolved from dinosaurs. As science writer Riley Black wrote in 2010, his ideas about the origin of birds “were not a perfect anticipation of our current knowledge,” but Huxley, an adept anatomist, was clearly onto something.

Indeed, scientists have since identified a host of features that comfortably position as birds as dinosaurs in the phylogenetic tree. Kate Lyons, an assistant professor at the University of Nebraska’s Lincoln School of Biological Sciences, says there “isn’t just one smoking gun” that allows paleontologists to say birds are dinosaurs, as there are “multiple pieces of evidence” that point to this conclusion, as she wrote to me in an email.

Paleontologist Steven Brussatte from the University of Edinburgh says we know birds are dinosaurs by applying the same reasoning that tells us bats are mammals.

 

“Yes, birds are small, and have feathers, and wings, and fly, and that is different from the image of dinosaurs we’re used to,” he wrote in an email. “Bats are the mammalian analogy—they are small, have wings, and fly, and they don’t look anything like a dog or elephant or primate, but they are mammals nonetheless.”

Indeed, bats feature many traits exclusive to mammals, like hair, molar teeth, three tiny ear bones, and the ability to feed young with milk. Likewise, birds have features that are only seen in theropod dinosaurs, Brussatte explained.

Like feathers.

Indeed, while there’s no single “smoking gun” to pin birds down as dinosaurs, the presence of feathers is probably the most smoking gunniest thing of all. The fossil record is filled with examples of feathered non-avian dinosaurs, and because feathers are unique to birds, scientists are able to link them both together as dinosaurs.

Skeptics may argue that the emergence of feathers in both birds and non-avian dinosaurs is a consequence of convergent evolution, in which similar traits appear independently in unrelated species. Smith says convergent evolution is unlikely in this case because “many of the non-avian dinosaurs that were found with preserved feathers are the exact species that were already, independently hypothesized to be close relatives of birds,” including Velociraptors and Sinosauropteryx.

 

To which he added: “Feathers are ridiculously complex structures, and while convergent evolution frequently results in similar structures—and even entire animals—that appear on the surface to be quite alike, there aren’t any examples of convergent evolution duplicating structures on that scale, with that sort of fidelity.”

Phylogenetics—the study of the evolutionary relationships between species—provides further evidence that birds are dinosaurs, as Andre Rowe, a PhD student from the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol, explained in an email. With all due respect to Jurassic Park, paleontologists aren’t able to extract and analyze ancient dinosaur DNA, but they can examine the key characteristics shared between species as indicated by their skeletons and anatomy. Based on these key characteristics, scientists “can say with near certainty that birds belong to the theropod dinosaur lineage,” said Rowe, in reference to meat-eating dinosaurs like T. rexAllosaurus, and Compsognathus. Importantly, skeletons of theropods and birds show “no sudden changes in their evolutionary relationship, but rather a smooth transition over millions of years,” he added.

“Taking a trip back in time, we can trace the evolution of the basic bird body plan all the way back to some of the earliest dinosaurs,” wrote Kristi Curry Rogers, a vertebrate paleontologist at Macalester College in Minnesota, in an email. “Just like dinosaurs, birds walk with their legs held directly underneath their bodies, and dinos gave birds an extra little boost in growth rates.”

 

Holly Woodward Ballard, an associate professor of paleontology and anatomy at the University of Oklahoma, put it this way: “We know birds are dinosaurs because they share more characteristics with extinct dinosaurs than other living animal groups do.”

Indeed, there are many other features to consider—things like “wishbones, bones hollowed out by air sacs, and wrists that can rotate,” allowing dinosaurs to “fold their arms up against their bodies,” according to Brussatte.

In an email, paleontologist and evolutionary biologist Jessica Theodor from the University of Calgary described these and other dino-specific features. For example, the structure that allows birds to bend their hands backward at the wrist, which they do to fold their wings, is also found in the arms of wingless coelurosaurs, and biologists can trace the modification of this structure “through theropod evolution,” she explained.

Comparison between the air sacs of Majungasaurus and a duck. Graphic: Zina Deretsky/NSF

Kat Schroeder, a PhD student from the Department of Biology at the University of New Mexico, described the fusion of certain vertebrae into the synsacrum and pygostyle as one of the most significant evolutionary adaptations in birds.

“The synsacrum is the fusion of the vertebrae over the hips, which stiffens the back and helps with flight, and the pygostyle is a fusion of the last caudal vertebrae that supports tail feathers, which is actually found in some non-avian dinosaurs like Oviraptorosaurs and Ornithomimosaurs which may have had feather fans instead of long tails or fans at the tips of their tails,” she wrote in an email.

“Birds have small flanges on their ribs, called uncinate processes, that provide some mechanical advantage to the breathing muscles of the rib cage,” and they’re also found in oviraptors and dromaeosaurs, as Theodor explained. What’s more, “bird skeletons have a number of other structural similarities to dinosaurs in the skeleton, all of which place them together in phylogenetic analyses,” she said.

Evidence of brooding amongst some dinosaurs, in which animals rest over their nests to keep their eggs warm and protected, is a behavior seen in modern birds, as Rowe reminded me. Also, dinosaurs and birds both used gizzard stones (stones that are swallowed to aid in digestion), “as the stones would grind up food that had already been ingested,” he said.

As I mentioned earlier, scientists can’t study ancient dinosaur DNA, but they can study modern dinosaur DNA.

“The evidence that birds are really just tiny little dinosaurs that learned to fly comes from the dinosaur fossil record as well as from the bodies and genomes of living birds,” Curry Rogers explained. “When we look at modern birds, we can see little mementos of their more ferocious history locked deep inside their genes—extinct developmental programs for building longer tails and teeth.”

To which she added: “It’s all right there—written in the bones and bodies of dinosaurs, living and extinct!”

So the next time a hummingbird comes to your feeder, feel free to greet the tiny bird as a visiting dinosaur. You can likewise claim to have tasted dinosaurs after munching on some chicken wings, or that you were attacked by a dinosaur when a goose frightened you away from her nest. And when the Toronto Blue Jays face off against the Baltimore Orioles, you’re totally good to refer to the matchup as the battle of the dinos.

It’ll sound strange, but you have the science to back you up.

Source: https://gizmodo.com/

200-Million-Year-Old Fossil Sheds Light on the Evolution of How Dinosaurs Breathed

Saturday, July 10, 2021

Life reconstruction of Heterodontosaurus vocalizing on a cool Jurassic morning. Credit: Viktor Radermacher

An international team of scientists has used high-powered X-rays at the European Synchrotron, the ESRF, to show how an extinct South African 200-million-year-old dinosaur, Heterodontosaurus tucki, breathed. The study was published in eLife on July 6, 2021.

In 2016, scientists from the Evolutionary Studies Institute at the University of the Witwatersrand in Johannesburg, South Africa, came to the ESRF, the European Synchrotron in Grenoble, France, the brightest synchrotron light source, for an exceptional study: to scan the complete skeleton of a small, 200-million-year-old plant-eating dinosaur. The dinosaur specimen is the most complete fossil ever discovered of a species known as Heterodontosaurus tucki. The fossil was found in 2009 in the Eastern Cape of South Africa by study co-author, Billy de Klerk of the Albany Museum, Makhanda, South Africa. “A farmer friend of mine called my attention to the specimen,” says de Klerk, “and when I saw it I immediately knew we had something special on our hands.”

Fast forward some years: the team of scientists, using scans and new algorithm developed by ESRF scientists to virtually reconstruct the skeleton of Heterodontosaurus in unprecedented detail, and thus show how this extinct dinosaur breathed. “This specimen represents a turning point in understanding how dinosaurs evolved” explains Viktor Radermacher, corresponding author, South African PhD now at the University of Minnesota, US.

Digital Heterodontosaurus South African dinosaur skeleton produced by the scanning at the ESRFn the European Synchrotron, France, that shows complete specimen and new anatomy. Credit: Vincent Fernandez, ESRF, NMHN

Not all animals use the same techniques and organs to breathe. Humans expand and contract their lungs. Birds have air sacs outside their lungs that pump oxygen in, and their lungs don’t actually move. For a long time, paleontologists assumed that all dinosaurs breathed like birds, since they had similar breathing anatomy. This study, however, found that Heterodontosaurus did not–it instead had paddle-shaped ribs and small, toothpick-like bones, and expanded both its chest and belly in order to breathe.

Heterodontosaurus is one of the oldest and first-evolving Ornithischians, the group that includes favorites like Triceratops, Stegosaurus, and duckbilled dinosaurs. Heterodontosaurus lived in the early Jurassic period, about 200 million years ago, surviving an extinction at the end of the prior Triassic period. Understanding how this dinosaur breathed could also help paleontologists figure out what biological features allowed certain dinosaurs to survive or caused them to go extinct.

“We’ve long known that the skeletons of ornithischian dinosaurs were radically different from those of other dinosaurs,” explains Richard Butler, from the School of Geography, Earth, and Environmental Sciences, University of Birmingham, UK. “This amazing new fossil helps us understand why ornithischians were so distinctive and successful,” he adds.

The new Heterodontosaurus tucki specimen AM 4766 affectionately called “Tucky.” Digitally reconstructed anatomy on the right, thanks to ESRF scans. Credit: Viktor Radermacher

This study is the result of a long-standing collaboration between paleontologists based in South Africa and at the ESRF, where non-invasive techniques have been developed specifically for palaeontological studies. “You could only do this study with a synchrotron,” says Vincent Fernandez, scientist at the Natural History Museum in London, UK, co-author of the study and former ESRF scientist. “The characteristics of the ESRF’s X-rays, combined with its high energy beamline configuration, made scanning this complete turkey-sized dinosaur possible.”

This is a perfect example of the diversity of life on Earth. “The takeaway message is that there are many ways to breathe,” Radermacher said. “And the really interesting thing about life on earth is that we all have different strategies to do the same thing, and we’ve just identified a new strategy of breathing.”

“Studies like this highlight how South Africa’s fossil record once again helps us understand evolutionary origins,” said senior author Jonah Choiniere, Professor at the Evolutionary Studies Institute, University of the Witwatersrand, South Africa.

Reference: “A new Heterodontosaurus specimen elucidates the unique ventilatory macroevolution of ornithischian dinosaurs” by Viktor J Radermacher, Vincent Fernandez, Emma R Schachner, Richard J Butler, Emese M Bordy, Michael Naylor Hudgins, William J de Klerk, Kimberley EJ Chapelle and Jonah N Choiniere, 6 July 2021, eLife.
DOI: 10.7554/eLife.66036

Authors Viktor Radermacher, Kimberley Chapelle, and Jonah Choiniere were supported by grants from the NRF-African Origins Platform, Centre of Excellence in Palaeosciences, and the Palaeontological Scientific Trust. South African participation in the ESRF, the European synchrotron, is supported by the NRF and DSI.

Source: https://scitechdaily.com/

Several Species of Pseudo-Horses Lived in Spain 37 Million Years Ago

Thursday, July 8, 2021

Palaeotheriid mammal Leptolophus cuestai (left) and equoid perissodactyl Pachynolophus zambranen (center and right). Image credit: Ulises Martínez Cabrera.

Paleontologists have identified two new species of palaeotheriid mammals from fossils found at the Eocene site of Zambrana in Alava, Spain.

The two new species, named Leptolophus cuestai and Leptolophus franzeni, lived 37 million years ago in what is now Spain.

They belong to Palaeotheriidae (pseudo-horses), an extinct family of herbivorous that ranged across Europe and Asia from the Eocene through to the early Oligocene.

“Can one imagine animals similar to horses with three toes, the size of a fox terrier, a Great Dane and a donkey living in a subtropical landscape in Alava? Many of these pseudo-horses have been described at the Zambrana site,” said Dr. Ainara Badiola, a researcher at the Universidad del País Vasco/Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea.

“Examples of them are Pachynolophus zambranensis and Iberolophus arabensis, which were first specified in this paleontological enclave.”

Leptolophus cuestai and Leptolophus franzeni not only expand the fossil record and the biodiversity of palaeotheriid fauna, but also display dental features atypical for Eocene horses.

“Their molars have a very high crown and are covered with a thick layer of cementum,” said Dr. Leire Perales-Gogenola, also from the Universidad del País Vasco/Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea.

“This type of dentition, also present in other endemic Iberian palaeotheriids, could be indicative of a difference in environmental conditions between the Iberian and Central European areas, with more arid conditions or less dense or closed forests and the presence of more open areas in Iberia.”

Leptolophus cuestai also had molars with atypically high crowns, similar to those of some of the earliest horses in Europe.

“At the end of the Eocene in Europe, forests of an intertropical type gradually disappeared, giving way to plant communities of a more temperate type with more open areas,” the paleontologists said.

“Modern horses appeared in Europe later on during the Miocene (23-5.3 million years ago).”

“Their dentition, with very high crowns, was adapted for eating vegetation with high grit content (grasses).”

The findings were published in the Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.

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Leire Perales-Gogenola et al. New Leptolophus (Palaeotheriidae) species from the Iberian Peninsula and early evidence of hypsodonty in an Eocene perissodactyl. Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology, published online May 20, 2021; doi: 10.1080/02724634.2021.1912061

Source: www.sci-news.com/

Iconic Independence Day Line Is a Nod to Jurassic Park

Monday, July 5, 2021

Independence Day writer Dean Devlin states that Jeff Goldblum's "must go faster" line is a reference to another of the actor's films: Jurassic Park.

According to Independence Day writer Dean Devlin and star Jeff Goldblum, one of the movie's iconic lines came from another of the actor's films: Jurassic Park.

The production of Independence Day offered some leeway in terms of improvisation, which led to some of the film's most famous lines. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter, Devlin mentioned how he would sometimes ask the cast to say certain things. "Whenever they would improv, I would sometimes come in and suggest a word to throw in," Devlin said. "So I just ran in and said, 'We'll probably cut it later, but you [Goldblum] got to give me the 'must go faster' line from Jurassic Park.'"

Goldblum was a little more apprehensive about the usage of the line in the film. "I was loath to appropriate from some other character [Goldblum's Dr. Ian Malcolm], and I hoped Mr. Spielberg wouldn't be unhappy that we'd used it. I think it all worked out." The line ended up staying in the movie, taking place near the end of the film as Goldblum and Will Smith's characters are flying out of the alien spaceship after planting the explosives that would save the day. The scene also saw another famous improvised Goldblum line, "The fat lady. You're obsessed with the fat lady," stated shortly before saying "Must go faster."

In Jurassic Park, the line occurs in a similarly tense escape moment, as Goldblum's character and others are attempting to outrun the movie's infamous T. Rex. The Jurassic Park line itself was improvised by the movie's director, Steven Spielberg, during the filming of the scene. When it came to Independence Day, Goldblum said improvisation was for the sake of entertainment. "We improvised, we were fooling around, having a good time."

The cast and crew mentioned several other famous improvised lines and scenes, such as Smith's attempt attempt at steering the UFO. Director Ronald Emmerich created a sticker for the scene that led to Smith reversing the ship before Goldblum turns the sticker around, suggesting "You go that way."

David Brenner, the film's editor, had no issue with keeping the improvised lines. "I just felt free to put in stuff I thought was fun and cool," he said. "Even if it sometimes was going to make a scene longer, you want to get this stuff in because you are not sure at the end how much comedy plays." Ultimately, some of the movie's most iconic lines were the product of improvisation, and according to the Independence Day crew, were for the sake of having fun.

Source: The Hollywood Reporter / www.cbr.com/

Study: Climate Change Drove Prehistoric Proboscideans to Extinction

Saturday, July 3, 2021

Dusk falls on East Africa’s Turkana Basin 4 million years ago, where our early upright-walking ape ancestors, Australopithecus anamensis (foreground), shared their habitat with several co-existing proboscidean species, as part of a spectacular herbivore community containing some progenitors of today’s charismatic East African animals. Background (left to right): Anancus ultimus, last of the African mastodonts; Deinotherium bozasi, colossal herbivore as tall as a giraffe; Loxodonta adaurora, gigantic extinct cousin of modern African elephants, alongside the closely-related, smaller Loxodonta exoptata. Middle ground (left to right): Eurygnathohippus turkanense, zebra-sized three-hoofed horse; Tragelaphus kyaloae, a forerunner of the nyala and kudu antelopes; Diceros praecox, an ancestor of the modern black rhino. Image credit: Julius Csotonyi.

new study, published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, challenges claims that early humans slaughtered mammoths, mastodonts and prehistoric elephants to extinction over millennia.

“The worldwide extirpation of megafaunas was a radical upheaval in the recent evolutionary history of terrestrial ecosystems, with Late Pleistocene human activities often considered culpable,” said lead author Dr. Juan Cantalapiedra from the University of Alcalá and his colleagues.

“Yet, understanding these extinctions in view of long-term macroevolutionary dynamics of the megafauna lineages has been critically lacking.”

“Proboscideans, being keystone megaherbivores in Cenozoic terrestrial ecosystems, were among the most affected groups,” they noted.

“For centuries, their fossil record elucidated an evolutionary history of success and decline in equally dramatic measures, with three endangered living elephant species representing a mere vestige of a once formidable clade high in both taxonomic diversity and ecomorphological disparity, which spread across Africa, Eurasia and the Americas.”

“Therefore, proboscidean evolution poses an invaluable case study for palaeobiologists to explore causes of uneven distribution in biodiversity across phylogeny and evolutionary history.”

In the study, the researchers re-examined the rich fossil record of proboscideans in its entirety and investigated the interactions between their diversification and the timing of their evolution.

They compiled a dataset for extinct and living proboscideans with unprecedented detail, which consists of 185 species, 2,130 fossil occurrences, and 17 traits (such as body size, skull shape and the chewing surface of their teeth).

By investigating these traits, they discovered that all proboscideans fell within one of eight sets of adaptive strategies.

“Remarkably for 30 million years, the entire first half of proboscidean evolution, only two of the eight groups evolved,” said co-author Dr. Zhang Hanwen, a researcher in the School of Earth Sciences at the University of Bristol.

“Most proboscideans over this time were nondescript herbivores ranging from the size of a pug to that of a boar.”

“A few species got as big as a hippo, yet these lineages were evolutionary dead-ends. They all bore little resemblance to elephants.”

“The course of proboscidean evolution changed dramatically some 20 million years ago, as the Afro-Arabian plate collided into the Eurasian continent.”

“Arabia provided crucial migration corridor for the diversifying mastodont-grade species to explore new habitats in Eurasia, and then into North America via the Bering Land Bridge.”

“The immediate impact of proboscidean dispersals beyond Africa was quantified for the very first time in our study,” Dr. Cantalapiedra said.

“Those archaic North African species were slow-evolving with little diversification, yet we calculated that once out of Africa proboscideans evolved

“One case in point being the massive, flattened lower tusks of the shovel-tuskers. Such co-existence of giant herbivores was unlike anything in today’s ecosystems.”

By 3 million years ago the elephants and stegodonts of Africa and eastern Asia seemingly emerged victorious in this unremitting evolutionary ratchet.

However, environmental disruption connected to the coming Ice Ages hit them hard, with surviving species forced to adapt to the new, more austere habitats.

The most extreme example was the woolly mammoth, with thick, shaggy hair and big tusks for retrieving vegetation covered under thick snow.

The scientists identified final proboscidean extinction peaks starting at around 2.4 million years ago, 160,000 and 75,000 years ago for Africa, Eurasia and the Americas, respectively.

“It is important to note that these ages do not demarcate the precise timing of extinctions, but rather indicate the points in time at which proboscideans on the respective continents became subject to higher extinction risk,” Dr. Cantalapiedra said.

Unexpectedly, the results do not correlate with the expansion of early humans and their enhanced capabilities to hunt down megaherbivores.

“We didn’t foresee this result. It appears as if the broad global pattern of proboscidean extinctions in recent geological history could be reproduced without accounting for impacts of early human diasporas,” Dr. Zhang said.

“Conservatively, our data refutes some recent claims regarding the role of archaic humans in wiping out prehistoric elephants, ever since big game hunting became a crucial part of our ancestors’ subsistence strategy around 1.5 million years ago.”

“Although this isn’t to say we conclusively disproved any human involvement. In our scenario, modern humans settled on each landmass after proboscidean extinction risk had already escalated. An ingenious, highly adaptable social predator like our species could be the perfect black swan occurrence to deliver the coup de grace.”

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J.L. Cantalapiedra et al. The rise and fall of proboscidean ecological diversity. Nat Ecol Evol, published online July 1, 2021; doi: 10.1038/s41559-021-01498-w

Source: www.sci-news.com/

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