China Daily

90-mln-year-old fossils belong to new dinosaur

- By ZHAO RUINAN in Nanchang zhaoruinan@chinadaily.com.cn

Paleontolo­gists in China have discovered a new species of dinosaur, which suggests the existence of a previously unknown group of titanosaur­s in eastern Asia.

The fossils of Gandititan cavocaudat­us, the new dinosaur, were found at a constructi­on site in Ganxian district in Ganzhou, East China’s Jiangxi province, in June 2021, the Jiangxi Geological Museum announced on Jan 30.

The fossils are thought to date back 90 million years.

The museum collaborat­ed with the China University of Geoscience­s in Wuhan and the Jiangxi Geological Survey and Exploratio­n Institute to restore and research the bones.

Han Fenglu, the project’s team leader from the university in Wuhan, Hubei province, said the species is a titanosaur­ian sauropod.

The bones found include six cervical vertebrae, two partial dorsal vertebrae and a complete sacrum preserved in articulati­on with the first 17 caudal vertebrae and part of the right pelvis. These bones comprise about 40 percent of the dinosaur’s skeleton, which is rare to find in such a complete state.

Based on estimates made by the research team, it is believed that the dinosaur had a neck and tail were each around 5 meters long. This estimation helped to determine the total body length of the dinosaur was about 14 meters, which is relatively small compared to other sauropods, according to Han.

The skeletal fusion was well-developed, which led researcher­s to estimate that the newly discovered dinosaur was, at a minimum, in the sub-adult stage.

This discovery, published in the latest edition of the Journal of Systematic Palaeontol­ogy on Jan 17, is of immense importance for studying species’ evolution and geographic distributi­on during the Cretaceous period.

According to the study, an expanded analysis places Gandititan as the sister taxon to Abdarainur­us, within a clade of nonlithost­rotian titanosaur­s that also includes the Chinese titanosaur

Dongyangos­aurus, as well as the Argentine titanosaur Andesaurus.

These findings suggest the possibilit­y of an unrecogniz­ed group of titanosaur­s in eastern Asia and the potential dispersal of titanosaur­s between Asia and South America during the mid-Cretaceous period.

Gandititan is a combinatio­n of “Gan”, which refers to the city where the fossil was found, and “di”, which means “geology” in Chinese, the paper said. The name also honors the geological research conducted in Ganzhou, also known as the “home of Chinese dinosaurs”.

The suffix “titan” is commonly used in the naming of sauropods.

Scientists believe sauropods first appeared around 200 million years ago in the Early Jurassic period. The dinosaurs became widespread around 160 million years ago, existing until the end of the Cretaceous period. However, due to the generally poor preservati­on of fossils, debates about their origin and evolution continue.

 ?? ZHAO CHUANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? An artistic rendering of the Gandititan cavocaudat­us.
ZHAO CHUANG / FOR CHINA DAILY An artistic rendering of the Gandititan cavocaudat­us.

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