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New
Dinosaur From Mexico Offers Insights Into Ancient Life On West
America
Tuesday, February 12, 2008
Cretaceous-era
duck-billed dinosaur discovery opens new window into time when
much of continent was submerged
Reconstructed
skull of Velafrons coahuilensis, a 72-million-year-old
duck-billed dinosaur discovered in Coahuila, Mexico.
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Credit:
Reconstruction courtesy of Gaston Design, Inc.
A new species of dinosaur
unearthed in Mexico is giving scientists fresh insights into the
ancient history of western North America, according to an
international research team led by scientists from the Utah
Museum of Natural History at the University of Utah.
"To
date, the dinosaur record from Mexico has been sparse," said
Terry Gates, a paleontologist with the Utah Museum of Natural
History, Utah's designated natural history museum.
The new
creature - aptly dubbed Velafrons
coahuilensis - was a
massive plant-eater belonging to a group of duck-billed
dinosaurs, or hadrosaurs. "Velafrons
is a combination of Latin and
Spanish meaning "sailed forehead," in reference to the
large sail-like crest that grew atop the dinosaur's head,"
said Rosario Gomez, director of the paleontology program in
Coahuila, Mexico. "The second part of the name honors the
state of Coahuila in north-central Mexico, where the specimen was
found," said Gomez.
Utah Museum of Natural
History paleontologists teamed up with researchers from the Utah
Geological Survey; Coordinacion de Paleontologia, Secretaria de
Educacion y Cultura de Coahuila the Museo del Desierto, in
Saltillo, Coahuila, Mexico; and the Royal Tyrrell Museum, in
Drumheller, Alberta, Canada, to excavate and study the
72-million-year-old specimen. The species was announced in the
December edition of the Journal of Vertebrate
Paleontology.
Mexico's arid climate poses challenges for
dinosaur hunters, Gates explained. With little rainfall, there is
minimal erosion, which means fewer fossils ever see daylight. Yet
the fossils emerging from Coahuila turn out to be a vital part of
the North American story for the latter part of the Age of
Dinosaurs.
A
Different World
Artist's
rendering of what Velafrons coahuilensis, the new
duck-billed dinosaur from Mexico, would have looked like.
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Credit:
Todd Marshall
For most of the Late
Cretaceous, high global sea levels resulted in flooding of the
central, low-lying portion of North America. As a result, a warm,
shallow sea extended from the Arctic Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico,
splitting the continent in two. Dinosaurs living on the long,
narrow, peninsula-like western landmass - known as Laramidia, or
more simply, "West America," - occupied only a narrow
belt of plains that were sandwiched between the seaway to the
east and rising mountains to the west. Central America had not
formed at the time, which made Mexico the southern tip of the
continent.
In many ways, the Late Cretaceous is the
best-understood time during the Age of Dinosaurs, thanks in large
part to over 120 years of dinosaur hunting in Canada, Montana,
and the Dakotas. "Yet the dinosaurs from Mexico have
remained a mystery," noted Scott Sampson, a Utah Museum of
Natural History paleontologist and co-author of the study.
Gates
described the arid, desert terrain where the dinosaur was
recovered as nothing like Mexico during the Late Cretaceous.
About 72 million years ago, this region was a humid estuary near
the southernmost tip of West America, an area where salt water
from the ocean mixed with fresh water from rivers. Many of the
dinosaur bones are covered with fossilized snails and marine
clams, indicating that these animals inhabited environments near
the shore.
In addition to isolated skeletons, the
researchers found large bonebeds of jumbled duck-bill and horned
dinosaur skeletons. These sites appear to represent mass death
events, perhaps associated with powerful storms like those that
are known to occur around the southern tips of Africa and South
America today.
"The region was periodically hammered
by monstrous storms," Sampson said, "devastating miles
of fertile coastline, apparently killing off entire herds of
dinosaurs."
Recovering
a Hatchet Head
Until
recent years, there have been few large-scale paleontological
projects in Mexico focused on the Age of Dinosaurs. Velafrons
stands as one of the first
dinosaurs to be named from Mexico.
The creature comes from
a rock unit known as the Cerro del Pueblo Formation, which dates
to around 71.5 million to 72.5 million years ago. The skeleton
was discovered in the early 1990s on the outskirts of a small
town called Rincon Colorado, about 27 miles west of the city of
Saltillo.
The skeleton was found by Martha Carolina
Aguillon, and excavated over the course of several seasons by
members of the Coordinacion de Paleontologia de la Secretaria de
Educacion y Cultura de Coahuila under the direction of Jim
Kirkland, of the Utah Geological Survey, and Rene
Hernandez-Rivera, Instituto de Geología, Universidad
Nacional Autónoma de México. Much of the excavation
work was completed by volunteers as a participant-funded research
project organized by the Dinamation International Society and the
staff of the Museo del Desierto.
On becoming Utah's state
paleontologist, Kirkland encouraged Scott Sampson and his
students to take over his role on the Coahuila Paleontological
research project.
Then, in 2002, Sampson spearheaded the
first of two paleontological expeditions to Coahuila, by securing
funds from the University of Utah and National Geographic
Society. The Utah Museum of Natural History crew, along with
other researchers from Mexico, Canada, and the U.S., undertook
the daunting task of completing the hadrosaur excavation, in
addition to locating several other sites that contain new
dinosaur species.
Armed with a jackhammer and shovels, the
crew returned to the Rincon Colorado dig site, where they labored
for two weeks through 12 feet of overburden, eventually
uncovering the ancient skull. Upon its arrival at the Utah Museum
of Natural History, the skull then required another two years of
meticulous preparation by Jerry Golden, a skilled volunteer at
the museum.
Based on the development of several bony
features on the skull and skeleton, the scientists believe that
this animal was still a youngster at the time of death.
Nevertheless, although not yet fully grown, Velafrons
would have been on the
order of 25 feet long, suggesting an impressive adult size of 30
feet to 35 feet.
Gates explained that Velafrons
represents the first occurrence of
a crested duck-billed dinosaur in this region of North America.
"The crested duck-billed dinosaurs are an extraordinary
example of vertebrate evolution," he said. Unlike other
animals where the nose bone lies in front of their eyes, these
dinosaurs transformed their skulls so that the nose rested atop
their skull. The snout extended backward, up their face, in order
to fill the gap left by the relocated nose bone.
Interestingly,
breathing was not straight-forward for Velafrons
and its kin. Air flowed through a
series of passages from the snout, into their crest, and finally
inserting through a hole above their eyes. Scientists are
uncertain what Velafrons'
fan-shaped crest would have been used for, but a leading
hypothesis suggests mate attraction, which explains the complex
nasal passages as a possible musical instrument.
An
Ancient Ecosystem Revealed
In
addition to Velafrons,
the most recent expeditions recovered remains of a second kind of
duck-bill dinosaur, as well as a plant-eating horned dinosaur.
Like its famous cousin, Triceratops,
the new Coahuila horned dinosaur bore a massive horn over each
eye and a long bony frill projecting rearward. The Cerro del
Pueblo Formation has also yielded remains of large and small
carnivores, including large tyrannosaurs (though smaller, older
relatives of T. rex),
and more diminutive Velociraptor-like
predators armed with sickle-claws on their feet. As well as an
abundance of fossilized bones, researchers discovered the largest
assemblage of dinosaur track ways known from Mexico, a large area
crisscrossed with the tracks of different kinds of dinosaurs. In
all, the emerging picture is one of a diverse group of dinosaurs,
perhaps representing an entirely new set of species.
Gates
noted that this project is about much more than naming new
dinosaurs. Each new species represents another vital piece of the
puzzle as we attempt to comprehend the world of dinosaurs.
As
might be suspected, paleontologists are excited about the future
paleontological potential of this area.
"I am amazed
at how prolific this region is," Gates said of the amount of
material waiting to be collected. "Given the large number of
fossils, the high quality preservation, and the great research
team that is working this area, more spectacular discoveries are
just around the corner."
"Dinosaurs from this
particular period are important because this is a time that is
relatively poorly understood," said Don Brinkman, a project
researcher from Canada's Royal Tyrrell Museum of Paleontology,
who along with Aguillon, is studying the non-dinosaur vertebrates
found at the site, including turtles, fish, and lizards. "The
locality in Mexico goes a long way to filling in a gap in our
knowledge of the record of changes in dinosaur assemblages
throughout the Late Cretaceous era."
Few dinosaurs
from this time period are known in North America outside the
Drumheller region of Alberta, which is where the Royal Tyrrell
Museum is located. Brinkman explained that researchers now have
two points of comparison to examine not only different dinosaurs,
but also different ecologies.
Research teams want to find
examples of plant life and smaller animals that co-existed with
these dinosaurs. This information can be compared with
collections made in other parts of North America to understand
north-south variations in species and entire ecosystems.
Sampson
added, "Now that we've cracked open this amazing window into
the world of dinosaurs, we look forward to future expeditions
that will undoubtedly reveal more of Mexico's ancient past."
In
addition to advancing the field of paleontology, the researchers
hope that this project in Coahuila may encourage more tourism to
the area and bring attention to the Museo del Desierto, where the
original specimen will be permanently housed.
Source:
University of Utah

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