New plant-eating dino didn’t chew its food, but swallow it
February 24th, 2010 - 12:58 pm ICT by ANI ( Leave a comment )Washington, Feb 24 (ANI): A team of paleontologists has discovered a new plant-eating dinosaur that didn’t chew its food, but just grabbed it and swallowed it.
The new dinosaur, which the paleontologists are calling Abydosaurus, belongs to the group of gigantic, long-necked, long-tailed, four-legged, plant-eating dinosaurs such as Brachiosaurus.
They recovered four heads - two still fully intact - from a quarry in Dinosaur National Monument in eastern Utah.
Complete skulls have been recovered for only eight of more than 120 known varieties of sauropod.
“Their heads are built lighter than mammal skulls because they sit way out at the end of very long necks,” said Brooks Britt, a paleontologist at Brigham Young University.
“Instead of thick bones fused together, sauropod skulls are made of thin bones bound together by soft tissue. Usually, it falls apart quickly after death and disintegrates,” he added.
BYU geology students and faculty resorted to jackhammers and concrete saws to cut through the hardened 105-million-year-old sandstone containing the bones.
Analysis of the bones indicates that the closest relative of Abydosaurus is Brachiosaurus, which lived 45 million years earlier.
The four Abydosaurus specimens were all juveniles.
Most of what scientists know about sauropods is from the neck down, but the skulls from Abydosaurus give a few clues about how the largest land animals to roam the earth ate their food.
“They didn’t chew their food; they just grabbed it and swallowed it,” Britt said.
“The skulls are only one two-hundredth of total body volume and don’t have an elaborate chewing system,” he added.
All sauropods ate plants and continually replaced their teeth throughout their lives.
In the Jurassic Period, sauropods exhibited a wide range of tooth shapes. But by the end of the dinosaur age, all sauropods had narrow, pencil-like teeth.
Abydosaurus teeth are somewhere in between, reflecting a trend toward smaller teeth and more rapid tooth replacement. (ANI)
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Tags: brachiosaurus, brigham young, brigham young university, brooks britt, concrete saws, dinosaur age, dinosaur national monument, eastern utah, geology students, jackhammers, jurassic period, land animals, long necks, mammal skulls, paleontologist, paleontologists, sauropods, soft tissue, thin bones, tooth shapes