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Dinosaur fossils
from China help researchers describe new 'Titan'
Date:
January 29,
2014
Source:
University of Pennsylvania
Summary:
Paleontologists have characterized a
new dinosaur based on fossil remains found in northwestern China. The species,
a plant-eating sauropod named Yongjinglong datangi, roamed during the Early
Cretaceous period, more than 100 million years ago. This sauropod belonged to a
group known as Titanosauria, members of which were among the largest living
creatures to ever walk the earth.
.................................
team led by
University of Pennsylvania paleontologists has characterized a new dinosaur
based on fossil remains found in northwestern China. The species, a
plant-eating sauropod named Yongjinglong datangi, roamed during the Early Cretaceous period, more than
100 million years ago. This sauropod belonged to a group known as Titanosauria,
members of which were among the largest living creatures to ever walk the
earth.
At roughly
50-60 feet long, the Yongjinglong individual discovered was a
medium-sized Titanosaur. Anatomical evidence, however, points to it being a
juvenile; adults may have been larger.
The find,
reported in the journal PLOS ONE, helps clarify relationships among
several sauropod species that have been found in the last few decades in China
and elsewhere. Its features suggest that Yongjinglong is among the most
derived, or evolutionarily advanced, of the Titanosaurs yet discovered from
Asia.
Doctoral
student Liguo Li and professor Peter Dodson, who have affiliations in both the
School of Veterinary Medicine's Department of Animal Biology and the School of
Arts and Sciences' Department of Earth and Environmental Science, led the work.
They partnered with Hailu You, a former student of Dodson's, who now works at
the Chinese Academy of Sciences' Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and
Paleoanthropology, and Daqing Li of the Gansu Geological Museum in Lanzhou,
China.
Until very
recently, the United States was the epicenter for dinosaur diversity, but China
surpassed the U.S. in 2007 in terms of species found. This latest discovery was
made in the southeastern Lanzhou-Minhe Basin of China's Gansu Province, about
an hour's drive from the province's capital, Lanzhou. Two other Titanosaurs
from the same period, Huanghetitan liujiaxiaensis and Daxiatitan
binglingi, were discovered within the last decade in a valley one kilometer
from the Yongjinglong fossils.
"As
recently as 1997 only a handful of dinosaurs were known from Gansu,"
Dodson said. "Now it's one of the leading areas of China. This dinosaur is
one more of the treasures of Gansu."
During a
trip to Gansu, Liguo Li was invited to study the remains, which had been in
storage since being unearthed in 2008. They consisted of three teeth, eight
vertebrae, the left shoulder blade, and the right radius and ulna.
The
anatomical features of the bones bear some resemblance to another Titanosaur
that had been discovered by paleontologists in China in 1929, named Euhelopus
zdanskyi. But the team was able to identify a number of unique characteristics.
"The
shoulder blade was very long, nearly 2 meters, with sides that were nearly
parallel, unlike many other Titanosaurs whose scapulae bow outward," Li
said.
The scapula
was so long, indeed, that it did not appear to fit in the animal's body cavity
if placed in a horizontal or vertical orientation, as is the case with other
dinosaurs. Instead, Li and colleagues suggest the bone must have been oriented
at an angle of 50 degrees from the horizontal.
In addition,
an unfused portion of the shoulder blade indicated to the researchers that the
animal under investigation was a juvenile or subadult.
"The
scapula and coracoid aren't fused here," Li said. "It is open,
leaving potential for growth."
Thus, a
full-grown adult might be larger than this 50-60 foot long individual. Future
finds may help elucidate just how much larger, the researchers noted.
The ulna and
radius were well preserved, enough so that the researchers could identify
grooves and ridges they believe correspond with the locations of muscle
attachments in the dinosaur's leg.
The
researchers were also able to draw evidence about the dinosaur's relationship
to other species from the vertebrae, one of which was from the neck and the
other seven from the trunk. Notably, the vertebrae had large cavities in the
interior that the team believes provided space for air sacs in the dinosaur's
body.
"These
spaces are unusually large in this species," Dodson said. "It's
believed that dinosaurs, like birds, had air sacs in their trunk, abdominal
cavity and neck as a way of lightening the body."
In addition,
the longest tooth they found was nearly 15 centimeters long. Another shorter
tooth contained unique characteristics, including two "buttresses,"
or bony ridges, on the internal side, while Euhelopus had only one buttress on
its teeth.
To gain a
sense of where Yongjinglong sits on the family tree of sauropods, the
researchers were able to compare its characteristics with specimens from
elsewhere in China, as well as from Africa, South America and the U.S.
"We
used standard paleontological techniques to compare it with phylogenies based
on other specimens," Dodson said. "It is definitely much more derived
than Euhelopus and shows close similarities to derived species from South
America."
Not only
does the discovery point to the fact that Titanosaurs encompass a diverse group
of dinosaurs, but it also supports the growing consensus that sauropods were a
dominant group in the Early Cretaceous -- a view that U.S. specimens alone
could not confirm.
"Based
on U.S. fossils, it was once thought that sauropods dominated herbivorous
dinosaur fauna during the Jurassic but became almost extinct during the
Cretaceous," Dodson said. "We now realize that, in other parts of the
world, particularly in South America and Asia, sauropod dinosaurs continued to
flourish in the Cretaceous, so the thought that they were minor components is
no longer a tenable view."
Story
Source:
The above
story is based on materials
provided by University of Pennsylvania.
Note: Materials may be edited for content and length.
Journal
Reference:
- Li-Guo Li, Da-Qing Li, Hai-Lu You, Peter Dodson. A New Titanosaurian Sauropod from the Hekou Group (Lower Cretaceous) of the Lanzhou-Minhe Basin, Gansu Province, China. PLoS ONE, 2014; 9 (1): e85979 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0085979