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Sculpture of the previously unknown dinosaur species Falcarius
utahensis, which was dicovered by scientists from the
Utah Geological Survey and the Utah Museum of Natural History
at the University of Utah. The sculpture was created by
artist John Moore, with casting and painting by PaleoForms
LLC in Provo, Utah.
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a high-resolution version
Credit: PaleoForms LLC, Provo, Utah.
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Skeletal reconstruction of the newly discovered dinosaur
Falcarius utahensis. Scientists from the Utah Geological
Survey and the University of Utah's Utah Museum of Natural
History have recovered 1,700 bones from a mass grave near
Green River, Utah. With those bones, scientists now have
about 90 percent of a complete skeleton.
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Credit: Greg Paul.
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Bones of the newly discovered dinosaur Falcarius utahensis
are examined in the lab by doctoral student Lindsay Zanno
and paleontologist Scott Sampson, both of the University
of Utah's Department of Geology and Geophysics and the Utah
Museum of Natural History.
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Credit: Tom Taylor, Utah Museum of Natural History, University
of Utah.
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James Kirkland, Utah's state paleontologist at the Utah
Geological Survey, brushes off a fossil while sprawling
at the site of a boneyard where scientists have found the
fossils of hundreds to thousands of small dinosaurs belonging
to a newly discovered species, Falcarius utahensis.
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Credit: Don DeBlieux, Utah Geological Survey.
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Assembled from the bones of various individuals, this photo
shows the fossil forearms and claws of the newly discovered
dinosaur Falcarius utahensis compared with a human
hand. Paleontologists say the dinosaur, part of a group
known as therizinosaurs, represents an intermediate stage
between older meat-eaters such as Velociraptor,
the dinosaur popularized when it chased children through
a kitchen in the film "Jurassic Park," and later
plant-eating therizinosaurs.
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download high-resolution click here:
Credit: Don DeBlieux, Utah Geological Survey.
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Lindsay Zanno, a doctoral student in geology and geophysics
at the University of Utah and the Utah Museum of Natural
History, works at the site near Green River, Utah, where
she and other paleontologists excavated 1,700 bones of a
newly discovered dinosaur named Falcarius utahensis.
To
download high-resolution click here:
Credit: Tom Taylor, Utah Museum of Natural History, University
of Utah.
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For additional illustrations and photos click
here.
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May 4, 2005 -- Scientists have discovered a mass graveyard of
bird-like feathered dinosaurs in Utah. The previously unknown
species provides clues about how vicious meat-eaters related to
Velociraptor ultimately evolved into plant-munching vegetarians.
Discovery of the bizarre new species, Falcarius utahensis,
is reported in the Thursday May 5 issue of the journal Nature
by paleontologists from the Utah Geological Survey and the Utah
Museum of Natural History at the University of Utah.
Scientists do not yet know if the creature ate meat, plants or
both, says James Kirkland, Utah state paleontologist at the Utah
Geological Survey and principal scientist for the new study. But
“Falcarius shows the beginning of features we associate
with plant-eating dinosaurs, including a reduction in size of
meat-cutting teeth to leaf-shredding teeth, the expansion of the
gut to a size needed to ferment plants, and the early stages of
changing the legs so they could carry a bulky body instead of
running fast after prey.”
The adult dinosaur walked on two legs and was about 13 feet long
(4 meters) and stood 4.5 feet tall (1.4 meters). It had sharp,
curved, 4-inch-long (10 centimeter) claws.
Falcarius, which dates to the Early Cretaceous Period
about 125 million years ago, belongs to a group of dinosaurs known
as therizinosaurs. The group includes feathered dinosaurs such
as Beipiaosaurus that were found in southeast China in
recent years. Falcarius and Beipiaosaurus are
about the same age and appear to represent an intermediate stage
between deadly carnivores and later, plant-eating therizinosaurs.
Falcarius is anatomically more primitive than the Chinese
therizinosaurs.
The therizinosaurs are maniraptorans. Birds evolved from maniraptorans,
a group that includes sharp-clawed meat-eaters such as Utahraptor
and Velociraptor, the dinosaur popularized by chasing
children through the kitchen in the hit film “Jurassic Park.”
Falcarius “is the most primitive known therizinosaur,
demonstrating unequivocally that this large-bodied group of bizarre
herbivorous group of dinosaurs came from Velociraptor-like
ancestors,” says study co-author Lindsay Zanno, a graduate
student in geology and geophysics at the University of Utah and
the Utah Museum of Natural History.
Falcarius did not descend directly from Velociraptor,
but both had a common, yet-undiscovered ancestor, says study co-author
and paleontologist Scott Sampson, chief curator at the Utah Museum
of Natural History and an associate professor of geology and geophysics
at the University of Utah.
“We know that the first dinosaur was a small-bodied, lightly
built, fleet-footed predator,” he says. “Early on,
two major groups of dinosaurs shifted to plant-eating, but we
have virtually no record of those transitions. With Falcarius,
we have actual fossil evidence of a major dietary shift, certainly
the best example documented among dinosaurs. This little beast
is a missing link between small-bodied predatory dinosaurs and
the highly specialized and bizarre plant-eating therizinosaurs.”
With almost 1,700 bones excavated during the past three years,
scientists have about 90 percent of Falcarius’
bones and believe the skeletal remains show several signs of this
major evolutionary transition. It had leaf-shaped teeth designed
for shredding plants rather than the triangular, blade-like serrated
teeth of its meat-eating relatives. Its pelvis was broader, indicating
a larger gut to digest plant material, which is more difficult
to process than meat. Its lower legs were stubby, presumably because
it no longer needed to run after prey. Compared with carnivorous
relatives, Falcarius’ neck was more elongated and
its forelimbs were more flexible, perhaps for reaching plants
to eat.
Sampson says: “Falcarius represents evolution caught
in the act, a primitive form that shares much in common with its
carnivorous kin, while possessing a variety of features demonstrating
that it had embarked on the path toward more advanced plant-eating
forms.”
In addition to Kirkland, Zanno and Sampson, other co-authors of
the study were fossil preparator Donald DeBlieux, who directed
excavation for the Utah Geological Survey, and George Washington
University therizinosaur expert James M. Clark. The study was
funded by a $100,000 grant from the Discovery Channel to the Utah
Geological Survey, which provided a matching $100,000.
A Place to Eat and a Place to Die
Falcarius means sickle-maker, so named because later
plant-eating therizinosaurs had 3-foot-long, sickle-like claws.
The species name, utahensis, comes from the fact the
new species was discovered in east-central Utah, south of the
town of Green River.
The new species was excavated from ancient gravely mudstones at
the base of the Cedar Mountain rock formation, at a site named
the Crystal Geyser Quarry after a nearby manmade geyser that spews
cold water and carbon dioxide gas.
Kirkland estimates hundreds to thousands of individual dinosaurs
– from hatchlings to adults – died at the 2-acre dig
site.
In the past, scientists have suggested a number of possible explanations
for such mass deaths in the fossil record, Sampson says. These
include drought, volcanism, fire and botulism poisoning from water
tainted by carcasses.
Kirkland leans toward a theory developed by Celina and Marina
Suarez, twins who are geology graduate students at Temple University
in Philadelphia. Their research on carbonate-rich sediments in
which the dinosaurs were buried suggests the area was near or
in a spring, and that there were at least two mass die-offs. That
raises the possibility the dinosaurs were drawn repeatedly to
the site by water or an attractive food source – perhaps
plants growing around the spring – and then the spring occasionally
would poison the animals with toxic gas or water, Kirkland says.
Falcarius is the fourth new dinosaur species Kirkland
has discovered in the Cedar Mountain Formation’s Yellow
Cat member (a unit of the formation) in 11 years. Others are meat-eaters
Utahraptor and Nedcolbertia, and an armored
dinosaur named Gastonia.
An American Dinosaur?
Therizinosaurs have been found for 50 years in China and Mongolia,
but were not recognized as a distinct group until about 25 years
ago, Sampson says.
The only therizinosaur known previously from North America was
Nothronychus, which Kirkland discovered in the late 1990s
in New Mexico. It was 90 million years old, so scientists initially
believed the older therizinosaurs in China had migrated over a
land bridge from Asia through Alaska to the American Southwest.
But due to the constantly shifting plates of Earth’s surface,
Alaska didn’t exist 125 million years ago – the age
of both Falcarius and the oldest known Chinese therizinosaur,
Beipiaosaurus. So scientists now wonder if therizinosaurs
originated in Asia and migrated through Europe to North America
before the Atlantic Ocean basin opened up, or if they originated
in North America and migrated through Europe to Asia.
“Falcarius may have been home-grown,” Kirkland
says.
“This discovery puts the most primitive therizinosaurs in
North America,” Zanno says. “This tells us that North
America potentially could be the place of origin for this group
of dinosaurs.”
Kirkland says Falcarius likely was covered with shaggy,
hair-like “proto-feathers,” which may or may not have
had a shaft like those found in bird feathers.
No feathers were found with the Falcarius fossils. Feathers
rarely are preserved, but “a number of its close relatives
found in China had feathers [preserved by unusual lake sediments],
so the presumption is this animal too was feathered,” Sampson
says.
Therizinosaurs have been enigmatic. Until Falcarius,
only “bits and pieces” of other species’ skeletons
had been found, and “their anatomy was so different from
that of any other dinosaur that we didn’t know what to make
of them,” Zanno says.
The most advanced therizinosaurs – which lived 94 million
to 65 million years ago – had larger bodies, long necks,
short legs, broad hips, short tails, lightly built skeletons,
small heads and many small, leaf-shaped teeth – except at
the front of the face where there likely was a beak and –
in the case of Therizinosaurus – 3-foot-long claws.
The plant-eating, elephant-sized Therizinosaurus –
a name that means sickle lizard – was “the ultimate
in bizarre,” resembling “a cross between an ostrich,
a gorilla and Edward Scissorhands,” Zanno says.
Kirkland says it is not surprising that Falcarius represents
an intermediate step between carnivorous and herbivorous dinosaurs
because “all lines of plant-eating animals had meat-eating
ancestors.” Long before Falcarius existed, numerous
plant-eating dinosaurs such as brachiosaurs already had arisen
from meat-eating relatives, he adds.
Sampson says the rise of plant-eating therizinosaurs “may
have been directly linked to the spread of flowering plants about
125 million years ago.”
A Fossil Thief Led Scientists to the Dinosaur Site
In 2001, Kirkland located the site where the new dinosaur species
was discovered thanks to a commercial fossil collector who later
was convicted of fossil theft.
“We never would have found it, at least for 100 years or
so, if he hadn’t taken us to the site,” Kirkland says.
“Once he figured out he had a new dinosaur, he realized
scientists should be working the site. His conscience led him
to get this stuff to me.”
Kirkland first received fossils of the new dinosaur in 1999, when
he worked in Colorado and people brought him the bones from a
fossil show in Tucson, Ariz. Later, Denver fossil enthusiast John
Scandizzo provided Kirkland with rough coordinates to the therizinosaur
site, but Kirkland could not locate it. So Scandizzo introduced
Kirkland to Lawrence Walker, who had taken fossils from the site.
Walker led Kirkland to the site.
Kirkland soon applied for a digging permit from the federal Bureau
of Land Management, which asked Kirkland to give a legal deposition.
In November 2002, Walker was indicted in U.S. District Court in
Salt Lake City for theft of government property. He pleaded guilty,
was sentenced to five months in prison and 36 months of supervised
release, and was ordered to pay $15,000 in restitution. He served
his prison time in 2003 and then returned home to Moab, Utah.
Although Walker led Kirkland to the site, “we simply can’t
justify illegal activity because it might let us know of something
we might not know otherwise,” Sampson says.
“Illegal commercial collection of fossils has become a major
problem globally,” he adds. “Many highly significant
specimens, a number of which represent animals brand new to science,
are being lost to private collections. This unfortunate trend
robs not only the scientists, but the general public, given that
these fossils actually belong to the public and museums simply
hold them in perpetuity for research, education and exhibit.”
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