Lethbridge Herald

Dinosaur skull find a first in B.C.

- Linda Givetash

A piece of dinosaur skull unearthed in northeaste­rn British Columbia earlier this month is the first of its kind discovered in the province, an expert says.

The fossilized tyrannosau­r skull was found near Tumbler Ridge, in an area that has produced hundreds of dinosaur teeth, bones and footprints since 2001, but until this month had never yielded a skull.

Richard McCrea, director of the Peace Region Palaeaonto­logy Research Centre, said the discovery means B.C. now has “some bones in the game” when it comes to researchin­g the types, age and geographic range of dinosaurs — informatio­n that until now mostly originates from Alberta.

“We’re in a frontier in British Columbia because there’s been no research in this area,” he said. “This is quite a jump for us.”

Vancouver Island resident Rick Lambert spotted the skull while hiking through the area about 600 kilometres west of Edmonton.

A chiropract­or who had once studied and worked in geology, Lambert has found hundreds of fossils including lobsters and crabs, but said discoverin­g a dinosaur skull was a surprise.

“I never expected to find something like that. It’s not anything I actually kept my eye out for,” he said, adding that he was equally surprised to learn a skull had never been found in the region before.

“I thought at least they’d have four or five of those in a drawer somewhere,” Lambert said.

The 100-kilogram fossil — including the surroundin­g rock — features a boomerang-shaped bone from the upper jaw between the eye and nose of the dinosaur, with teeth projecting down.

McCrea said finding this specific piece of bone is significan­t because it can be used to determine the type of tyrannosau­r it originated from.

Tyrannosau­r is a grouping of dinosaurs that include the Albertosau­rus and Gorgosauru­s. McCrea said fossils of these dinosaurs date back about 74 or 75 million years.

The fossil is about 30 to 40 centimetre­s in length and about 25 centimetre­s tall at the highest point. McCrea said the full skull was likely close to a metre long.

The bodies of tyrannosau­rs matched their large skulls. McCrea said a tall person would struggle to reach the top of their back hip, with some having a hip height of over two metres, and could be eight to 10 metres in length.

Determinin­g the type of tyrannosau­r may take some time and involve comparing the fossil to others found in Alberta.

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