Straits Times    /    Singapore
 
 
 
Sep 23, 2010 
2 new horned dinos found 

  
The two new species of large horned dinosaurs, the  Utahceratops (top) and 
the Kosmoceratops (bottom), are close cousins of the  famous herbivorous 
Triceratops. On the right are the head reconstructions of the  new species. -- 
PHOTOS: AFP
WASHINGTON - TWO new species of large horned dinosaurs - close cousins of 
the  famous herbivorous Triceratops - have been unearthed in the western 
desert of  the United States, paleontologists have revealed. 
The 'remarkable' finds - one of the dinosaurs had a massive 2.3-metre 
skull,  the other with a head decorated with 15 horns - were made in southern 
Utah.  Researchers said on Wednesday the ancient beasts were thought to have 
lived some  76 million years ago in the late Cretaceous period. 
'The giant plant-eaters were inhabitants of the 'lost continent' of  
Laramidia, formed when a shallow sea flooded the central region of North  
America,' according to paleontologists, who revealed their work in an online  
open-access journal produced by the Public Library of Science. 
The larger of the finds, with its enormous skull, was named Utahceratops  
gettyi, after the US state, and Mike Getty, paleontology collections manager 
at  the Utah Museum of Natural History, who discovered the animal. Ceratops 
is  Ancient Greek for 'horned face.' 
In size and look, Mark Loewen, a co-author on the paper, described  
Utahceratops as 'a giant rhino with a ridiculously supersized head.' The 
smaller  
of the dinosaurs is named the Kosmoceratops richardsoni, with kosmos being 
Latin  for 'ornate,' after its elaborate collection of horns dotted around its 
skull.  The last part of the name is an ode to volunteer researcher Scott 
Richardson who  discovered two skulls of the animal. 
Kosmoceratops' 15 horns are located over the nose, one atop each eye, one 
at  the tip of each cheek bone, and the remaining ten across the rear part of 
bony  frill, 'making it the most ornate-headed dinosaur known,' according 
to the  study. 
Lead author Scott Sampson described Kosmoceratops as 'one of the most 
amazing  animals known, with a huge skull decorated with an assortment of bony 
bells and  whistles.' The study was funded mostly by the US Bureau of Land 
Management and  the National Science Foundation. --  AFP

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