Millennium Post

New species of bird-like dinosaur found in Mongolia

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SEOUL: Scientists say they have discovered a new species of feathered, bird-like dinosaurs in the the Gobi desert of Mongolia.

A study, published in the journal PLOS ONE, described an incomplete skeleton of an oviraptoro­saur from the Late Cretaceous found in the Nemegt Formation of the Gobi desert.

Despite the abundance of nearly complete oviraptoro­saur skeletons discovered in southern China and Mongolia, the diet and feeding strategies of these toothless dinosaurs are still unclear, said Yuong-nam Lee from Seoul National University, South Korea.

Oviraptoro­saurs were a diverse group of feathered, bird-like dinosaurs from the Cretaceous of Asia and North America.

The new species, named Gobiraptor minutus, can be distinguis­hed from other oviraptoro­saurs in having unusual thickened jaws.

This unique morphology suggests that Gobiraptor used a crushing feeding strategy, supporting previous hypotheses that oviraptoro­saurs probably fed on hard food items such as eggs, seeds or hard-shell mollusks, researcher­s said.

Histologic­al analyses of the femur revealed that the specimen likely belonged to a very young individual. The finding of a new oviraptoro­saur species in the Nemegt Formation, which consists mostly of river and lake deposits, confirms that these dinosaurs were extremely well adapted to wet environmen­ts.

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