New_Scientist_3_08_2019

(Darren Dugan) #1
3 August 2019 | New Scientist | 47

group called noasaurs, and stands out by
having feet that balanced the dinosaur’s weight
on a single toe of each foot, which seem to
match strange tracks found nearby. But similar
tracks are also seen in older Jurassic rocks –
indicating that another one-toed dinosaur is
still awaiting discovery in those older strata.
So where can we look to find all these
missing species? There is still a great deal
of dinosaur-bearing rock that has yet to be
searched even once, much less dug into for
detail. “Some of the future hotspots for
dinosaur palaeontology are in south-eastern
and central Asia, much of Africa, and some
northern countries of South America,” says
Zanno. Remote, difficult-to-work sites could
yield important finds, too. “The Arctic and
Antarctic have huge potential for new dinosaur
discoveries,” says Evans. The Cretaceous strata
of Africa is also little-explored compared with
that in other parts of the world, he says, and
could yield important finds. That is still a lot
of ground to cover.
Some time periods are hazy in the
palaeontological imagination. “Targeting
poorly known time periods, like the Middle
Jurassic, is critical,” says Forster. This was the
time period during which dinosaurs truly
became globally dominant and increased the
range of sizes they were capable of reaching.
The novelty of these finds will undoubtedly
continue to make headlines. But there is
more to this than raw numbers. “Dinosaurs,
or any fossils, are part of our collective past,”
says Forster. Finding new species is the first
step in visualising and understanding
evolution and extinction. As Forster says,
“dinosaurs and ourselves are all part of the
same ever-changing system”. ❚

Riley Black, who previously wrote
under the name of Brian Switek,
is author of Skeleton Keys, and
My Beloved Brontosaurus

145 125 105 85 65

CRETACEOUS PERIOD PALAEOCENE PERIOD

150 mya
115 mya
Deinonychus

Fruitadens

Hesperornithoides


70 mya
Acheroraptor

66 mya
Huge asteroid collides
with Earth, wiping out
non-avian dinosaurs

1.8 metres

140 mya 68 mya
Tyrannosaurus rex
Triceratops

90 mya
Vespersaurus

96 mya
Moros intrepidus
Bajadasaurus

Evans at the University of Toronto, Canada.
But they are out there. “Over the past two
decades, many of the new dinosaur species
being recognised from classic localities like
Dinosaur Provincial Park in Alberta and in
the Hell Creek Formation of the western US
are on the small end of the dinosaur size range,
below the size of an average person,” he says.
“We are just scratching the surface in
terms of dinosaur diversity,” says Evans. “The
potential to fill in our knowledge of dinosaur
diversity on the small end of their size range
is huge.” This includes unusual forms of
dinosaurs as well as species similar to those
we have already found. In June this year, for
instance, Max Langer at the University of São
Paulo in Brazil, and his colleagues, described
an unusual dinosaur they named Vespersaurus
paranaensis in the Cretaceous rock of southern
Brazil. The dinosaur belonged to an enigmatic

Over the past 40 years,
palaeontologists have
spent a great deal of time
investigating the last of the
dinosaurs. It is only more
recently that they have
begun to get acquainted
with some of the first.
From discoveries in
the 1990s, such as the
metre-long Eoraptor
lunensis found in
Argentina, it seemed like
the earliest dinosaurs
emerged about 228 million
years ago in the middle
of the Triassic period. But
fieldwork in eastern Africa
has taken the dinosaur
record back even further,
dramatically altering our

image of what the first
dinosaurs were like.
In 2013, researchers
described Nyasasaurus
parringtoni from a
245-million-year-old
partial skeleton unearthed
in Tanzania. The skeleton
is too fragmented to tell
if it is definitively one of
the first dinosaurs, but
along with more complete
remains of related animals
called silesaurs, it gives
us clues about what the
first ones were like.
Instead of being
rapacious carnivores that
tore their way onto the
evolutionary scene, the
earliest dinosaurs seem

to have been lanky, German
shepherd-sized animals
that probably ate plants
as well as insects. They
were comparatively meek
creatures that lived in
a world dominated by
relatives of crocodiles.
Along with many other
forms of reptiles, dinosaurs
sprung up in the wake
of Earth’s worst mass
extinction 252 million
years ago. But they didn’t
dominate from the start.
Most were small and on
the ecological sidelines
until another mass
extinction 200 million
years ago removed most of
their reptilian competitors.

THE FIRST DINOSAUR


When alive, this
dinosaur glided
on bat-like wings

SUN ZIFA/SIPA USA/PA IMAGES
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