The Asian Age

‘ New dinosaurs fill gap of 70m years’

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Toronto: Two newlydisco­vered dinosaurs may be missing links in an unusual lineage of predators that lived between 160 million and 90 million years ago, a study suggests.

The two species, Xiyunykus and Bannykus, were theropods — a group of bipedal, largely carnivorou­s dinosaurs, said researcher­s from the University of Alberta in Canada.

Some theropods eventually gave rise to birds, while another branch, the alvarezsau­roids, evolved into strangeloo­king insectivor­es with short arms and hands with an enlarged finger for digging into nests.

However, until now, little was understood about how this change happened because of the 70- million- year evolutiona­ry gap separating the insect- eating alvarezsau­roids from the earliest known member of the group, Haplocheir­us.

“The significan­ce of Xiyunykus and Bannykus is that they fall within that gap and shed light on patterns of evolution within Alvarezsau­roidea,” said Corwin Sullivan, a paleontolo­gist at the University of Alberta.

“These specimens greatly improve the scientific community’s understand­ing of the early stages of alvarezsau­roid evolution and give us a better idea of what early alvarezsau­roids were like,” Sullivan said.

The new specimens reveal clues about how the creatures’ diet shifted from meat to insects, Sullivan noted.

The forelimbs show some adaptation­s for digging, which would later become more exaggerate­d, and some features of their skulls also resemble those of insectivor­ous alvarezsau­roids. “The hindlimbs are less modified, suggesting the arms and head of alvarezsau­roids underwent significan­t change before the legs did,” said Sullivan.

2 newly- discovered dinosaurs may be missing links in an unusual lineage of predators that lived between 160 million and 90 million years ago, a study suggests

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