New fossil rewrites the history of the dinosaurs, new research

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New fossil rewrites the history of the dinosaurs, new research
New fossil rewrites the history of the dinosaurs, new research

Two Brazilian fossils some 230 million years ago that have just been officially presented to the scientific community are helping to understand how dinosaurs appeared on the planet and branched out into various species. In two words: very slowly.

That is the conclusion of the studies on the environment shared by one of the oldest dinosaurs known, the predator Buriolestes schultzi, which was 1.5 meters long, and an even smaller carnivore, the Ixalerpeton polesinensis, only half a meter in length.

What makes these fossils so special is both their relative completeness and the fact that they were found in the same spot. This confirms what had been suggested before, but only from fragmentary evidence: The dinosaurs did not suddenly outcompete their close non-dinosaur precursors, but coexisted with them in the same ecological niches for tens of millions of years.

“Lagerpetids appeared in the middle Triassic, dinosaurs came slightly later,” senior author Max Langer of Universidade de São Paulo tells Inverse in an email. “Their joint occurrence shows that dinosaurs did not replace such animals in a rapid taking over of ecological space, but that their rise (gain in diversity) was more steady, since various groups (lagerpetids included) were co-occurring with dinosaurs in the beginning.”

Ixalerpeton, the lagerpetid, was maybe a couple of feet long. This specimen is the most complete lagerpertid ever found, and includes the first recorded examples of a skull, neck, arm, and pectoral girdle from this animal group. This gives paleontologists a better idea of which traits were are uniquely dinosaurian, and which were shared with early dinosaur precursors, says Langer.

Buriolestes is much bigger than Ixalerpeton, maybe ten feet from snout to tail, but still a dwarf compared to sauropod giants like Diplodocus and Brontosaurus, which would emerge many millions of years later. His teeth were strictly adapted for meat eating, making this the only known example of a carnivorous sauropodomorph. “As such, it helps to understand how those dinosaurs turned into eating plants right in the beginning of their evolution,” says Langer.

“Each alone, the finds would already be of great scientific importance,” he says. But found together, and preserved so completely, these specimens tell a fascinating story of a time when the reign of the dinosaurs was just in its infancy.

It’s tempting to think of dinosaurs as a fairly homogenous entity, but, in fact, they existed for 165 million years and evolved considerably in that time. The Tyrannosaurus rex is a closer relative to the chicken, both in terms of time and genetics, than it is to these early dinosaur and proto-dinosaur beasts.

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