Evolution: A gigantic bird-like dinosaur

The remains of a gigantic, surprisingly bird-like dinosaur have been uncovered in Inner Mongolia, China.

WWW.NATURE.COM/NATURE

This press release is copyright Nature.

PLEASE CITE NATURE AND OUR WEBSITE www.nature.com/nature AS THE SOURCE OF THE FOLLOWING ITEMS. IF PUBLISHING ONLINE, PLEASE CARRY A HYPERLINK TO http://www.nature.com/nature

[3] Evolution: A gigantic bird-like dinosaur (pp 844-847)

The remains of a gigantic, surprisingly bird-like dinosaur have been uncovered in Inner Mongolia, China. The animal — which lived in the Late Cretaceous (about 70 million years ago) — is thought to have had a body mass of about 1,400 kilograms, which is surprising as most theories suggest that carnivorous dinosaurs got smaller as they got more bird-like. The dinosaur, which is described in this week’s Nature, has been classed as a new species and genus.

Xing Xu and colleagues carried out a phylogenetic analysis of the skeleton and have grouped the fossil with a family that included the beaked, bird-like Oviraptor because of its similarly avian features. What is most striking, however, is that at 1,400 kilograms the fossil is about 35-times heavier than other similar feathered dinosaurs, which rarely exceeded a body mass of 40 kilograms.

The authors estimate that the new dinosaur would have been about eight metres long and would have stood, at the shoulder, twice the height of a man. They suggest that a growth rate considerably faster than large North American tyrannosaurs contributed to this. The team also noticed lines of arrested growth on the fossil, indicating that it was still a young adult when it died, so the full-sized dinosaur may have been even larger than this. But, despite its great size, many features of its anatomy were more bird-like, rather than less, as would have been expected.

CONTACT

Xing Xu (Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China)
Tel: +86 10 8836 9196; E-mail: [email protected] or [email protected]

Please contact Xing Xu for more details on Tel: +86 10 8836 9196; E-mail: [email protected]

PRESS CONTACTS…

For North America and Canada
Katie McGoldrick, Nature Washington
Tel: +1 202 737 2355; E-mail: [email protected]

For Japan, Korea, China, Singapore and Taiwan
Mika Nakano, Nature Tokyo
Tel: +81 3 3267 8751; E-mail: [email protected]

For the UK/Europe/other countries not listed above
Helen Jamison, Nature London
Tel: +44 20 7843 4658; E-mail [email protected]

About NPG

Nature Publishing Group (NPG) is a division of Macmillan Publishers Ltd, dedicated to serving the academic, professional scientific and medical communities. NPG's flagship title, Nature, was first published in 1869. Other publications include Nature research journals, Nature Reviews, Nature Clinical Practice and a range of prestigious academic journals including society-owned publications. NPG also provides news content through [email protected]. Scientific career information and free job postings are offered on Naturejobs.

NPG is a global company with headquarters in London and offices in New York, San Francisco, Washington DC, Boston, Tokyo, Paris, Munich, Hong Kong, Melbourne, Delhi, Mexico City and Basingstoke. For more information, please go to www.nature.com.

Published: 13 Jun 2007

Contact details:

The Macmillan Building, 4 Crinan Street
London
N1 9XW
United Kingdom

+44 20 7833 4000
Country: 
News topics: 
Content type: 
Reference: 

NATURE