Scientific News Biology To unknown science animals and plants NEW FRONTIERS FOR DINOSAUR SCIENCE
NEW FRONTIERS
FOR DINOSAUR SCIENCE
Dr. Paul C. Sereno shares his
latest efforts to understand dino evolution
Sereno's ongoing field work in
Africa has yielded a menagerie of new dinosaurs. These discoveries have included
the giant predator, Carcharodontosaurus, which rivaled Tyrannosaurus in size.
Another find was the fleet-footed meat-eater, Deltadromeus, that has no close
counterpart on other continents; and the spinosaur, Suchomimus. Giant
long-necked plant-eaters, found in a communal death site, included the 60-foot
long Jobaria.
The latest discoveries by Sereno,
a paleontologist at the University of Chicago, have included the 40-foot long
crocodilian, Sarcosuchus — otherwise known as “super-croc” — and several
smaller relatives, such as a tiny dwarf croc. Other recent finds included
Africa's first small predatory dinosaur, and a very unusual armored plant-eater.
“Such finds are rapidly filling
in Africa's dinosaur world during its phase of isolation during the Cretaceous,”
Sereno noted.
Discoveries of the past decade
have transformed the fossil record of dinosaurs, he added—from their first
appearance in the middle Triassic, to their final radiations at the end of the
Cretaceous. “The fossiliferous sequence of middle to late Triassic beds in
northwestern Argentina provides a very complete look at the earliest dinosaurs
and the timing of the dinosaurian radiation,” he said.
Primarily on the basis of his
fossil evidence, which includes very complete skeletons of the early theropods,
Eoraptor and Herrerasaurus, Sereno proposes that the initial radiation of
dinosaurs significantly preceded their global dominance in diversity and
abundance.
Fossil discoveries help establish
a global picture of dinosaur evolution, and, they underscore the role of
large-scale extinction in shaping that world, according to Sereno. Transient
land corridors provided intercontinental bridges that also strongly affected the
evolution of dinosaurs. Dinosaurs, as exclusively land-dwelling animals with a
global distribution, provide the best test case for how evolution responds to
the break-up of a supercontinent.
Other major evolutionary
questions involving dinosaurian evolution are the focus of new work by Sereno.
“Why did it take 50 million
years for dinosaurian predators and herbivores to reach their maximum body size
but mammals only a handful?” he asked. “And, why is there so much empty
ecospace during the Mesozoic by comparison to mammals during the Cenozoic? Where
are the burrowers, the climbers, the aquatic specialists?”
The answers, Sereno suggested,
lie in the posture and body size of early dinosaurs and the constraints these
imposed on all subsequent evolution. Computer simulation of the fragmenting
dinosaur world, Sereno says, will help us unravel the large-scale rules at work.
Ñontact: Monica Amarelo
mamarelo@aaas.org
617-236-1550
American Association for the Advancement of
Science
Source of the given news and the copyrights belong to a
American Association for the Advancement of
Science
Publishing date: March 6, 2002
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