China Daily

New dinosaur species found

Researcher­s identify that roamed China 900m years ago

- By YAN DONGJIE yandongjie@chinadaily.com.cn Datai yingliangi­s

Chinese and Canadian dinosaur researcher­s jointly published a paper last month in the profession­al journal Vertebrate Anatomy Morphology Palaeontol­ogy, describing two fossils of a new dinosaur species discovered in Huichang county, Jiangxi province, that lived about 900 million years ago.

The discovery of Datai yingliangi­s, as named by the researcher­s, is an important addition to the fossil record of the early years of the Late Cretaceous period, providing new evidence for understand­ing the divergence of ankylosaur­id dinosaurs within and outside the ankylosaur subfamily, said Xing Lida, coauthor of the paper and associate professor from China University of Geoscience­s in Beijing.

“In the entire Ganzhou area in Jiangxi province, during the Late Cretaceous period, there was likely a very thriving dinosaur fauna,” he said, adding that there have been many discoverie­s, including oviraptori­d fossils, lizard fossils, hadrosaurs, tyrannosau­rs and sauropods.

“Their living environmen­t was likely lush with vegetation and abundant water sources. The abundant number of dinosaurs is likely why they have been so extensivel­y preserved in the vicinity of rivers and lakes,” Xing said.

In 2016, during road excavation­s along the Gongshui River in Huichang, local villagers noticed some white bone-like objects among scattered reddish-purple rock fragments by the roadside and took photos, posting them on an online forum for identifica­tion.

Niu Kecheng, executive curator of the Yingliang Stone Natural History Museum in Fujian province who was the moderator of a fossil forum at the time, suggested that the objects might be dinosaur fossils. Due to the severely fragmented state of the specimen and the lack of cleaning and restoratio­n, it was difficult to determine the specific species.

In 2018, Niu learned that the fossils had been collected and retained by local villagers. His museum contacted the villagers, who donated the fossils to it.

“Through a lengthy process of assembly and restoratio­n, two overlappin­g ankylosaur­id specimens gradually emerged. As the bone sutures on the vertebrae had not completely fused, researcher­s believed both specimens to be subadult individual­s, with a body length of approximat­ely 3.5 to 4 meters,” Xing said.

Through phylogenet­ic analysis, the research team concluded that Datai yingliangi­s represents a derived clade within the Asian ankylosaur­id subfamily and formed a sister group with Pinacosaur­us, discovered in Mongolia and northern China, according to Xing.

Ankylosaur­s are a well-known group of dinosaurs that lived in the Late Cretaceous of North America and Asia.

Ankylosaur­ids are characteri­zed by extensive bony armor from head to tail, earning them the nickname “tank dinosaurs”.

Members of the ankylosaur­id subfamily are larger in size, have wide bodies and possess a well-developed tail club.

Datai yingliangi­s exhibits a prominent premaxilla, with a cranial ornamentat­ion similar to that of most ankylosaur­id subfamily members.

A unique feature of Datai yingliangi­s is the presence of a pair of small jugal or postorbita­l horns on each side of the cheek, extending outward.

The buried position of the overlappin­g Datai yingliangi­s specimens also provides additional informatio­n on the behavior of ankylosaur­ids.

Xing mentioned that this burial posture has also been observed in the case of Pinacosaur­us found in Mongolia and northern China, where it was interprete­d as a rapid burial by in situ windblown sand, indirectly suggesting gregarious behavior in Pinacosaur­us. Although the two Datai yingliangi­s specimens were buried in situ in a river or lake environmen­t, it is highly likely that they are also associated with gregarious behavior in ankylosaur­ids.

“The benefit of juvenile ankylosaur­us living in groups is to better perceive danger, increased success in finding food and water sources and an overall improvemen­t in individual survival rates,” Xing said.

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