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Toothy
Dinosaur Newest From Southern Utah
Thursday, October 4, 2007
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Utah
Museum of Natural History researchers at the University of
Utah prepared the skull of a new species of duck-billed
dinosaur -- Gryposaurus monumentensis -- which was
discovered in Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument.
Photo
Credit: Utah Museum of Natural History
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This
rendering of Gryposaurus monumentensis shows its robust jaws
that allowed thiscreature to eat just about any vegetation it
stumbled across.
Photo
Credit: Artist, Larry Felder
Utah and California
researchers unearth new duck-billed species in Grand
Staircase-Escalante National Monument
The newest dinosaur
species to emerge from Grand Staircase-Escalante National
Monument had some serious bite, according to researchers from the
Utah Museum of Natural History at the University of Utah.
"It
was one of the most robust duck-billed dinosaurs ever," said
museum paleontologist Terry Gates, who is also with the U.'s
Department of Geology and Geophysics. "It was a
monster."
Researchers from the Utah museum, the
national monument and California's Raymond M. Alf Museum of
Paleontology unearthed fossils of this ancient plant-eater from
the rocks of the Kaiparowits Formation. Researchers announced the
name of the creature - Gryposaurus monumentensis. (Gryposaurus
means "hook-beaked lizard" and monumentensis honors the
monument where the fossils were found.)
The first
description of the duck-billed dinosaur - which dates to the Late
Cretaceous Period 75 million years ago - appears in the Oct. 3
issue of the Zoological Journal of the Linnean
Society.
"Gryposaurus monumentensis is probably the
largest dinosaur in the 75-million-year-old Kaiparowits fossil
ecosystem," said Alan Titus, paleontologist for the national
monument.
Gates, lead author on the study, explained that
this creature could have eaten just about any vegetation it
stumbled across. "With its robust jaws, no plant stood a
chance against G. monumentensis," he said.
Scott
Sampson, another paleontologist with the Utah museum who was
involved with the project, emphasized the massively-built skull
and skeleton, referring to the animal as the "Arnold
Schwarzenegger of duck-billed dinosaurs."
Finding the skull
In 2002, a team from the Alf Museum, in Claremont,
Calif., located at the Webb School, discovered the site that
contained the skull used to describe the new creature. Every
summer, the California institution, the only
nationally-accredited paleontology museum on a high school
campus, gives Webb students and volunteers the chance to
participate in scientific field work.
The California team
was working a stretch of Grand Staircase that Utah researchers
had not examined. Duncan Everhart, a Pennsylvania furniture
maker, is credited with finding the skull.
Don Lofgren,
curator of the Alf Museum, said the team received permission from
the monument to dig deeper in 2003.
"We determined it
was a skull sitting upside down with the jaw on top," he
said.
Once Gates went out to take a look in 2004, he
quickly realized the California team had a potentially-important
find. The Alf Museum gave the Utah researchers permission to
prepare and study the skull.
Titus noted the discovery of
this new species was a team effort involving the Alf Museum, the
Utah Museum of Natural History and the national monument.
"The
cooperative effort put into its collection and research has truly
been a model for scientific investigation on public lands,"
he said.
It wasn't until Utah researchers began working on
the skull in 2005 that the full significance of the find began to
emerge, Gates said.
The well-preserved skull was initially
missing key pieces from the nose region. Fortunately, the
California museum had collected a box full of eroded bones,
including bits of the nose bone, which was critical for
identifying the creature.
"I knew immediately that we
had some species of Gryposaurus," Gates said.
A toothy beast
The
creature's large number of teeth embedded in the thick skull is
among the features that made G. monumentensis, as well as other
closely related duck-billed dinosaurs, such a successful
herbivore.
At any given time, the dinosaur had over 300
teeth available to slice up plant material. Inside the jaw bone,
there were numerous replacement teeth waiting, meaning that at
any moment, this Gryposaur may have carried more than 800
teeth.
"IIt was capable of eating most any plant it
wanted to," Gates said. "Although much more evidence is
needed before we can hypothesize on its dietary
preferences."
While the diet is unknown, given the
considerable size of the creature, the massive teeth and jaws are
thought to have been used to slice up large amounts of tough,
fibrous plant material.
The teeth may hold important clues
the dinosaur's eating habits. The Utah museum plans to study the
composition of the dinosaur teeth, which when compared to other
plant-eating dinosaurs from the Kaiparowits Formation, will help
researchers decipher differences in diet.
G. monumentensis
is one of several new dinosaur species found in Grand Staircase,
including: a Velociraptor-like carnivore named Hagryphus, a
tyrannosaur, and several kinds of horned dinosaurs. In all, more
than a dozen kinds of dinosaurs have been recovered from these
badlands, and most represent species that are new to science.
"This is a brand new and extremely important window
into the world of dinosaurs," said Sampson.
Under
ideal circumstances, paleontologists will find the skull and
other key bones at the same site. In this case, the head was the
only thing they managed to find from where the Alf team
searched.
Researchers believe the head of this particular
Gryposaur likely rolled into a bend of a river, where it was
partly buried. The right half of the head remained exposed to the
river current, dislodging several bones before this side was
buried as well.
In other parts of the monument, Utah
researchers have excavated bones believed to be from the same
species. Gates estimates G. monumentensis may have grown up to 30
feet long as an adult.
"As each new find such as
this new Gryposaur is made," Titus said, "it is placed
into the greater context of an entire ecosystem that has remained
lost for eons, and is only now coming under scientific scrutiny."
Life in ‘West
America'
Around
75 million years ago, southern Utah differed dramatically from
today's arid desert and redrock country. During much of the Late
Cretaceous, a shallow sea split North America down the middle,
dividing the continent into eastern and western landmasses.
In what Sampson terms "West
America," G. monumentensis and its fellow dinosaurs lived in
a narrow strip of land sandwiched between the seaway to the east
and rising mountains to the west. Due in large part to the
presence of the seaway, the climate was moist and humid.
Thanks
to more than 100 years of fossil collection, scientists know more
about the Cretaceous dinosaurs from North American than they do
from any other time or continent on Earth, Sampson noted.
While
G. monumentensis gulped down its greens and tried to avoid
predatory tyrannosaurs down in Utah, closely related but
different species of duck-billed dinosaurs were doing the same
thing farther north, in places like Montana and Alberta, Canada.
The new Utah species is proving crucial for determining
patterns of duck-billed dinosaur evolution and ecology during the
Late Cretaceous of North America, Gates said. He added that "this
calls for a re-evaluation of previous ideas about the evolution
of duck-billed dinosaurs across the world".
Earlier
explanations of dinosaurs undertaking long distance migrations
have gone out the window. "Now we have to figure out how so
many different kinds of giants managed to coexist in such small
areas," said Sampson. "We're just beginning to unravel
this story.
Bones from G. monumentensis are on display at
Big Water Visitor Center in Grand Staircase-Escalante National
Monument, and for a short time at the Utah Museum of Natural
History before returning to the Alf Museum.
Source:
University of UTAH

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