The tiny, intact skeleton of a baby rhinoceroslike dinosaur has been unearthed in Canada.
The
toddler was just 3 years old and 5 feet (1.5 meters) long when it
wandered into a river near Alberta, Canada, and drowned about 70 million
years ago. The beast was so well-preserved that some of its skin left
impressions in the nearby rock.
The fossil is the smallest intact
skeleton ever found from a group of horned, plant-eating dinosaurs known
as ceratopsids, a group that includes the iconic Triceratops.
Rare find
Finding intact baby dinosaurs is incredibly rare.
"The
big ones just preserve better: They don't get eaten, they don't get
destroyed by animals," said study co-author Philip Currie, a
paleobiologist at the University of Alberta. "You always hope you're
going to find something small and that it will turn out to be a
dinosaur."
Paleontologists had unearthed a few individual bones
from smaller ceratopsids in the past. But without intact juvenile
skeletons, such bones aren't very useful, as scientists don't really
know how each bone changes during each stage of the animals' lives,
Currie said.
The team was bone-hunting in Dinosaur Provincial Park
in Alberta when Currie came upon what looked like a turtle shell
sticking out from a hillside. Upon closer inspection, the fossil turned
out to be a frill, the bony decorative headgear that surrounds the back of the head in ceratopsids.
When the team excavated, they found the fossilized skeleton of a tiny dinosaur they identified as a Chasmosaurus belli, a species commonly found in the area.
Drowning victim
Amazingly,
almost the entire skeleton was intact, although sometime in the past, a
sinkhole had opened up below the beast and the forelimbs had fallen
away into an abyss. The fossil was so well-preserved that the tiny,
rosettelike pattern on its skin was imprinted in the rock below the dinosaur.
Based
on its size, the team estimates the dinosaur was about 3 years old —
just out of infancy — when it perished. (Like humans, these dinosaurs
typically take about 20 years to reach maturity, at which point they
have 6.5-foot-long [2 meters] skulls and weigh 3 to 4 tons.)
The
fossil was found in sediments associated with watery environments and
didn't have any bite marks or trace of injury, so it's likely the dino
toddler likely drowned.
"I think it may have just gotten trapped out of its league in terms of water current," Currie said.
Soon after, the baby dinosaur was buried by sediments and left untouched for millions of years.
Growth rates
Aside
from being cute, the new fossil helps paleontologists understand how
these plant-eating dinosaurs grew. Paleontologists can then better
identify and age the myriad individual bones from juveniles discovered
over the years.
Already, the team has learned that Chasmosaur juvenile
frills look different from those on adults, and that limb proportions
don't change much as they grow. Predatory theropods such as Tyrannosaurus rex have disproportionately long limbs as juveniles, presumably to keep up with the adults in the pack.
By contrast, "in Chasmosaurians,
the proportions are essentially the same, which probably means the
adults were probably never moving that fast," Currie said. "There was
never priority for these animals to run to keep up with the adults."
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