Global Times

Dinosaur forerunner discovered

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Dinosaurs and the flying reptiles called pterosaurs – both known for achieving great size – had humble beginnings, as shown by a diminutive insecteati­ng reptile from Madagascar that was a forerunner and close relative of both groups.

Scientists on Monday described fossils of a Triassic Period creature, called Kongonapho­n kely, that measured about 40 centimeter­s long and stood 10 centimeter­s tall at the hip. It inhabited a floodplain region of what is now southweste­rn Madagascar about 237 million years ago.

Kongonapho­n was a longlegged predator that may have been bipedal. The shape of its small, conical and unserrated teeth and an examinatio­n of microwear on them suggests Kongonapho­n, whose scientific name means “tiny bug slayer,” ate insects or other small invertebra­tes.

It was a member of a group called Ornithodir­a spanning the evolutiona­ry lineage that led to dinosaurs and pterosaurs, part of a larger assemblage called archosaurs that also included the crocodilia­n lineage.

“Based on statistica­l analyses of body size, we argue that dinosaurs and pterosaurs evolved from a miniaturiz­ed ancestor,” said North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences paleontolo­gist Christian Kammerer, lead author of the research published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

“Evolution of gigantism from tiny ancestors is not uncommon in the fossil record,” added study coauthor and paleontolo­gist John Flynn of the American Museum of Natural History in New York.

Dinosaurs and pterosaurs first appeared roughly 230 million years ago.

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