New Dinosaur!
Eulogy
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A newly named dinosaur whose head frill was adorned
with curly horns has joined the ranks of the legendary family that
includes the Triceratops, paleontologists said Wednesday.The
lumbering creature is named Wendiceratops pinhornensis, after the fossil
hunter Wendy Sloboda, who first discovered the trove of some 200 bones
in southern Alberta, Canada, said the study in the journal PLOS ONE.The
plant-eating dinosaur lived about 79 million years ago, weighing more
than a ton and measuring about six meters long (20 feet).In all,
more than 200 bones were collected from the Oldman Formation of southern
Alberta, near the border with the US state of Montana, in 2011.Paleontologists said the bones belonged to three adults and one juvenile."We
have parts of the body, legs, feet. We have parts of the skull,
significantly, and that is what allowed us to describe this brand-new
dinosaur," said Michael Ryan, curator of the Cleveland Museum of Natural
History."One of the most interesting things about Wendiceratops
is that it is one of the oldest centrosaurine-horned dinosaurs known
from North America."He said Wendiceratops appeared to be closely
related to an Asian horned dinosaur called Sinoceratops, which was
similar in shape and size."What we think may have happened is
that Wendiceratops, or animals very closely related to it, may have
actually given rise to the animals that Sinoceratops evolved from, and
they actually migrated from North America back over to Asia."And
while the exact shape of the animal's large nose horn is still unknown
because the fragments were too small to reconstruct it fully,
researchers said its head ornaments were unlike any dinosaur known to
science."The wide frill of Wendiceratops is ringed by numerous
curled horns, the nose had a large, upright horn, and it's likely there
were horns over the eyes too," said co-author David Evans, curator of
vertebrate paleontology at the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto, Canada. "The number of gnarly frill projections and horns makes it one of the most striking horned dinosaurs ever found."Sloboda
is a well-known Canadian fossil hunter who discovered the site in 2010.
Over the past three decades, she has uncovered hundreds of important
fossils.Another long-extinct creature she uncovered already bears her name -- a meat-eating bird called the Barrosopus slobodai."Wendy
Sloboda has a sixth sense for discovering important fossils. She is
easily one of the very best dinosaur hunters in the world," said Evans.
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