Audio By Carbonatix
A 5cm-wide (2in) fossil may have something big to say about how dinosaurs ranged across the Earth.
The 125-million-year-old neck vertebra belonged to a spinosaurid - an animal with a crocodile-like snout that it probably used to prey on fish.
The specimen is the first such dinosaur identified in Australia but one that is nearly identical to a UK creature.
This suggests northern and southern hemisphere dinos had a lot more in common than previously thought.
The traditional idea has been that these ancient animals could be placed into distinctive, geographically separated, groups. This small vertebra undermines that view, says Dr Paul Barrett from London's Natural History Museum.
"After looking at this specimen and having been forced to re-assess the distribution of spinosaurids, we took a look at other dinosaur groups from Australia, including the Tyrannosaur our team announced last year," he told BBC News.
"Taking all this evidence into account, we started to realise that a lot of dinosaur groups we'd thought of as either northern specialists or southern specialists actually had more cosmopolitan distributions."
It may be just one bone, but the team says it displays features that are unmistakably those of a spinosaurid.
A comparison of the neck bone from the Australian dino (L) and its UK counterpart (R). They share very distinctive spinosaur features
The vertebra, which is almost certainly from a juvenile, was unearthed on the coast of Victoria state.
It is hugely reminiscent of the neck bones in the well-known British dinosaur Baryonyx walkeri.
The remains of this UK creature were found in southern England, which in Cretaceous times was a lot warmer and covered by lagoons.
It had the classic crocodile-like skull with conical teeth that were ideally suited for catching fishy prey in the expanses of shallow water.
The assumption is that the Australian version pursued a very similar lifestyle.
Its discovery location was probably a flood plain in a rift valley created as Australia and Antarctica were breaking apart.
The dinosaur's Baryonyx-style snout would have been ideal for pulling fish out of the waters on this plain.
"The evidence is very limited - we'd be the first to admit that, but we're very confident that this Australian specimen belongs to the spinosaurids," Dr Barrett told BBC News.
"And because all the other members of this group share the same skull features we're pretty sure this dinosaur behaved in much the same way."
Source: BBC
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
Beyond the Party T-Shirt
2 minutes -
IGP promotes five police officers over Kwafokrom GOIL robbery arrest
8 minutes -
Tragedy at Senchi: Two crushed to death as tipper truck somersaults near market
24 minutes -
Government to unveil “The New Economy” Programme in 2027 Budget
35 minutes -
GIZ, Zoomlion and Blue Skies launch InnoWaste Project to create jobs and tackle plastic waste in Ghana
51 minutes -
‘The emotional journey is difficult, but you don’t stop’ – Antoine Semenyo’s mother on diaspora struggle
57 minutes -
‘Football in Ghana is about blood and legacy’ – Antoine Semenyo’s mother urges diaspora parents
1 hour -
QNET, Manchester City bring world-class football coaching to Ghana’s young talent
1 hour -
Emma Ankrah: Between quiet questions and the will to continue
1 hour -
Ghana’s economy shows strong recovery after “inherited crisis” – Ato Forson tells Parliament
1 hour -
No further IMF financial bailout will be required in the foreseeable future – Finance Minister
1 hour -
Learning from Ukraine, Hezbollah is now using fibre-optic drones to hit Israel
1 hour -
Teenager arrested at Senya Beraku for alleged defilement of 15-year-old girl
1 hour -
Ghana has moved from IMF ‘supplicant’ to partner – Ato Forson declares as economy surges past $100 Billion
1 hour -
“Ghana has moved from ICU to wellness center” — Finance Minister declares economic recovery
2 hours