Sharon Begley
|
Jun 13, 2007 09:08 AM
This guy was not playing by the rules.
Most theories of dinosaur evolution say that carnivorous dinosaurs,
the ancestors of today’s birds, got smaller as they became more
bird-like. But the remains of a new species and genus of dinosaur,
discovered in Inner Mongolia and announced at a press conference in
Beijing this morning, throw a wrench into that idea.
Gigantoraptor, as he has been named, is surprisingly
bird-like in his skeleton, and probably had feathers. He lived in the
Late Cretaceous about 70 million years ago, and an analysis of his
skeleton puts him in the same family as the beaked, bird-like Oviraptor,
say Xing Xu of the Chinese Academy of Sciences, who led the discovery,
and colleagues. By all rights, a birdlike dinosaur should have been
evolving toward the size of birds living today—if not crows, then at
least emus.
Gigantoraptor stood about 3.5 meters (10 feet) high at its
shoulder, twice the height of a person today. He stretched 8 meters (24
feet) in length and weighed in at 1,400 kilograms (3,000 pounds). Or,
in an artist’s conception,

Artist's reconstruction of Gigantoraptor with much smaller feathered ornithomimids. Credit: Zhao Chuang and Xing Lida/IVPP
(Our boy is the dino on the far left.)
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