http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/14/science/14dino.html



70 Million Years Ago, Birdlike Giant in China 
By JOHN NOBLE WILFORD
Published: June 14, 2007

Scientists have uncovered a huge surprise in the Inner Mongolia region of 
northern China: the fossil skeleton of an unusually robust birdlike dinosaur 
that lived 70 million years ago. The animal appeared to be a young adult 25 
feet long and weighing 3,000 pounds and, if it had lived longer, would probably 
have grown even larger.


 
Claro Cortes IV/Reuters
A model of the Gigantoraptor's head. 


 
Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology & Paleoanthropology/Associated Press

A sketch of a newly discovered Gigantoraptor dinosaur, compared to a human. 

Paleontologists said the discovery contradicted widely held theories that 
carnivorous dinosaurs got smaller as they evolved more birdlike 
characteristics. But they emphasized that the new specimen did not challenge 
the theorized link between dinosaurs and birds.

The Chinese scientists who made the discovery, being reported today in the 
journal Nature, said the skeleton belonged to a dinosaur family that included 
the beaked, birdlike oviraptor. This family was not closely related to the 
dromaeosaurid dinosaurs generally thought to be ancestors of modern birds. 
Still, the scientists concluded that the new skeleton "is an exception to some 
general patterns" during the evolution of related dinosaurs, including the 
"trend of size decrease" that is associated with the origin of birds. They said 
it was significant that the large specimen "shows many birdlike features 
absent" in smaller relatives.

Impressed by the size and puzzling character of their find, the team led by 
Xing Xu, a paleontologist at the Chinese Academy of Sciences in Beijing, 
classified the animal as a new genus and species. It was given the name 
Gigantoraptor erlianensis, the specific name recognizing the Erlian basin of 
Inner Mongolia, where the skeleton was excavated.

Gigantoraptor appears in an artist's reconstruction to have cut a menacing 
figure on the Cretaceous landscape. Rearing on its hind limbs, it spread out 
forelimbs tipped with sharp claws and prepared to pounce on prey with an open 
mouth and strong beak. Independent dinosaur experts said the description of the 
fossils of the half-complete skeleton appeared to support the discoverers' 
interpretations. They said Gigantoraptor probably had some feathers, though 
none were preserved.

"The specimen is quite convincingly diagnostic," said Peter Dodson, a 
paleontologist at the University of Pennsylvania and co-author of the 
authoritative reference book "Dinosauria." "This was on the line leading toward 
birds, though not itself the closest relative to birds by any means."

Mark A. Norell, a dinosaur paleontologist at the American Museum of Natural 
History, said the find was "pretty unexpected" and showed "how little we know 
about the diversity in the dinosaur world."

Dr. Xu's group said Gigantoraptor was about 300 times as heavy as similar 
dinosaurs and stood, at hips and shoulders, twice the height of a man. An 
examination of marks in the bones indicated that the young animal's growth rate 
was considerably faster than that of North American tyrannosaurs, which the 
scientists said contributed to its giant size.

The scientists reported that "the animal reached its young adult size within 
seven years and was still at a relatively early young adult stage at the time 
of death," which was probably in the 11th year of its life.

Their analysis also revealed "several salient features previously unknown in 
any other dinosaur," such as in the vertebrae and the limb bones. The hind 
limbs were more gracile than usual in such robust dinosaurs. Although no traces 
of feathers were found, the discovery team noted that smaller oviraptorosaurs 
were known to have had arm feathers and possibly other types of feathers. It is 
possible, the scientists said, that Gigantoraptor also retained some arm 
feathers, "given that the primary function of arm feathers is not to insulate 
the individual and their development is probably not related to size."

As Dr. Dodson explained, large-body animals tend to be naked. Their big concern 
is not heat loss, but the fact that they generate more heat that must be 
dissipated. If Gigantoraptor had feathers, they were sparse, as on an ostrich, 
and also like the ostrich, it might have used them in another heat-related 
function: courtship displays.70 Million Years Ago, Birdlike Giant in China 

<<13cnd_dino.190.3.jpg>>

<<13cnd_dino.190.1.jpg>>

Kirim email ke