logo
#

Latest news with #Fiorillo

Two-fingered dinosaur discovered in Mongolia with help of N.M. researcher
Two-fingered dinosaur discovered in Mongolia with help of N.M. researcher

Yahoo

time31-03-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

Two-fingered dinosaur discovered in Mongolia with help of N.M. researcher

What has two fingers per hand and just got discovered by an international research team in Mongolia? This guy: Duonychus tsogtbaatari. A new species of therizinosaurus has been discovered in Mongolia. Paleontologist Anthony Fiorillo, the executive director of the New Mexico Museum of Natural History and Science, was part of the research team. The specimen was discovered at a construction site in a small village near the Chinese border. Spine segments, a humerus and most significantly, two arms, were uncovered. 'This discovery shows us how much more there is to be discovered, that there is so much more biodiversity out there to be found in the fossil record,' Fiorillo said. 'I can't wait for the next person to find the next cool thing.' It was the two preserved arms that indicated the specimen was the member of an undiscovered species of therizinosaurus. Each arm has two fingers. 'On both arms, instead of the more typical three fingers, this one has two fingers,' Fiorillo said. 'That in itself is very unique within this group of dinosaurs called therizinosaurus.' Duonychus tsogtbaatari is believed to have lived 90 million years ago, weighing in at almost 600 pounds and standing several meters tall. Therazinosaurus in general had an 'ungainly' body plan, Fiorillo said. 'They have long, longish necks, longish tails, a potbelly, and then these wickedly developed claws,' Fiorillo said. 'Many therizinosaurs had very long, somewhat straight claws.' Those lethal claws were fictionalized in Jurassic World: Dominion, when a toothy rival is shish-kebabed on a therizinosaur's three-fingered hands. The specimen discovered in Mongolia, however, has sharply curved, sloth-like claws. When Duonychus tsogtbaatari lived, in what is now the Gobi Desert, it would have looked significantly different. Although there are gaps in the fossil plant record in the Gobi, it was likely a warmer and more humid climate. The authors of the paper posit the scythe-like claws were used to hook and bring vegetation to the dinosaur's mouth. Duonychus tsogtbaatari largely ate plants. The two-fingered arm raises questions as well. Several strains of theropods, a group of bipedal dinosaurs including Tyrannosaurus rex, independently evolved to have fewer fingers on each arm. Why? That remains to be seen, Fiorillo said. 'Beyond a broad statement that there's something driving evolution for, if you will, an increased efficiency of digit reduction, what you really like about a study is when it raises additional questions,' Fiorillo said. 'That is certainly one of the questions: Why is this going on, and why is it happening across multiple groups? And we don't have a real good answer for that yet.' The lead author, Hokkaido University paleontologist Yoshitsugi Kobayashi, an expert in Mongolian dinosaurs, was a student of Fiorillo's. Another author on the paper, Tsogtbaatar Chinzorig with the University of North Carolina and the Mongolian Academy of Sciences, was Kobayashi's student. Duonychus tsogtbaatari is named after his father. But that's not the only link between the Land of Enchantment and the new species. Fragmented fossils of therizinosaurs have been found in the Zuni Basin near the New Mexico/Arizona border. 'It's reasonable to suspect there may be more than one kind found here,' Fiorillo said. 'The great thing about paleontology is you realize how the world is connected.'

NM paleontologist on team researching new dinosaur species
NM paleontologist on team researching new dinosaur species

Yahoo

time29-03-2025

  • Science
  • Yahoo

NM paleontologist on team researching new dinosaur species

Mar. 27—More than 90 million years ago, a creature with a long neck and two claw-baring fingers roamed the Earth, grabbing plants and sinking its sharp, small leaf-shaped teeth into the greenery hanging from trees. This new species of dinosaur was found in 2012 by an international research team that included New Mexico Museum of Natural History & Science Executive Director Anthony Fiorillo. The scientists published a research paper on the Duonychus tsogtbaatari this week in the scientific journal iScience. "This work not only opens up new possibilities for research on a little-understood family of dinosaurs," Fiorillo said in a news release, "but it also showcases how international partnerships play a key role in our museum's research." The discovery started in southern Mongolia when a construction crew noticed something strange while putting down water pipelines. When they realized what was beneath the ground wasn't rock, but large bones, the crew called authorities at the Institute of Paleontology at the Mongolian Academy of Sciences in Ulaanbaatar — the capitol of Mongolia. The claw of the dinosaur was fully intact and completely fossilized, something that does not commonly occur, Fiorillo said in an interview. The discovery also suggests that dinosaurs seemed to generally evolve toward a reduction of digits. "The fact that we have a left and right hand when we recognized that there were only two fingers on each hand, that's when the light bulb went on, it's like, wow, this is not supposed to be the case," Fiorillo said. "That's what started us to get really excited by what we had." The newly discovered dinosaur is believed to have been a herbivore or omnivore and part of a group of theropod dinosaurs that lived in central and eastern Asia and western North America, including New Mexico. "In New Mexico, there are remains of this group of dinosaurs," Fiorillo said. "Not specifically duonychus, but therizinosaurus in general have been found here. This dinosaur does actually shed some light on dinosaurs within our own state." Fiorillo was selected to be part of the research team by his former student — Yoshitsugu Kobayashi — who Fiorillo collaborated with to release the research paper titled "Didactyl therizinosaur with a preserved keratinous claw from the Late Cretaceous of Mongolia," after unveiling the new dinosaur species. "Now that we have this paper, we have to figure out what we want to do next," he said. "We have to decide if we want to investigate this rock unit further and see if we can find other examples of this animal. We also need to get this knowledge out to the public and frame it in the context of what it means for New Mexico."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into the world of global news and events? Download our app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store