The Jerusalem Post

England’s ‘Isle of Fright’ boasted two big dinosaur predators

- • By WILL DUNHAM

Fossils found on a rocky beach show there was double trouble on England’s Isle of Wight about 127 million years ago, with a pair of large previously unknown dinosaur predators living perhaps side by side, both adapted to hunting along the water’s edge.

Scientists on Wednesday announced the discovery of fossils of the two Cretaceous Period meat-eaters – both measuring about 30 feet long and boasting elongated crocodile-like skulls – on the southwest of the island, one of Europe’s richest locales for dinosaur remains.

They are examples of a type of dinosaur called a spinosaur, known for long and narrow skulls with lots of conical teeth – perfect for grasping slippery fish – as well as strong arms and big claws.

One is named Ceratosuch­ops inferodios, meaning “horned crocodile-faced hell heron.” The name refers to a heron because of that bird’s shoreline-foraging lifestyle. Ceratosuch­ops had a series of low horns and bumps ornamentin­g its brow region.

The second is named Riparovena­tor milnerae, meaning “Milner’s riverbank hunter,” honoring British paleontolo­gist Angela Milner, who died in August. It may have been slightly larger than Ceratosuch­ops.

Each are estimated to have weighed around one to two tons, with skulls around a yard long, according to Chris Barker, a University of Southampto­n PhD student in paleontolo­gy and lead author of the study published in the journal Scientific Reports.

“Both would have been heron-like shoreline hunters, wading out into water and thrusting the head down quickly to grab things like fish, small turtles, et cetera, and on land would do something similar, grabbing baby dinosaurs or the like. They would basically have eaten anything small they could grab,” said paleontolo­gist and study co-author David Hone of Queen Mary University of London.

Spinosaurs were part of the broad group of bipedal meat-eating dinosaurs called theropods that included the likes of Tyrannosau­rus rex. As semi-aquatic hunters, spinosaurs targeted different prey and lacked the massive, boxier skull and large serrated teeth of T. rex, which inhabited North America about 60 million years later.

Ceratosuch­ops and Riparovena­tor roamed a floodplain environmen­t bathed in a subtropica­l Mediterran­ean-like climate. Forest fires occasional­ly ravaged the landscape, with fossils of burned wood found throughout Isle of Wight cliffs.

With a large river and other bodies of water attracting plant-eating dinosaurs and hosting numerous bony fish, sharks and crocodiles, the habitat provided Ceratosuch­ops and Riparovena­tor plenty of hunting opportunit­ies, Barker said.

These two cousins may have lived at the same time, perhaps differing in prey preference, or may have been separated a bit in time, the researcher­s said. There was a third roughly contempora­neous spinosaur named Baryonyx, whose fossils were unearthed in the 1980s, that lived nearby and was about the same size, maybe slightly smaller.

Partial remains of Ceratosuch­ops and Riparovena­tor were discovered near the town of Brighstone. Ceratosuch­ops is known from skull material, while Riparovena­tor is known from both skull and tail material. There are braincase remains for both, giving particular insight into these creatures.

The fossils helped the scientists produce a family tree of spinosaurs, indicating the lineage originated in Europe before moving into Africa, Asia and South America, according to University of Southampto­n paleobiolo­gist Neil Gostling, who supervised the research project.

The largest one, Spinosauru­s, reached 50 feet (15 meters) long and lived in North Africa roughly 95 million years ago. It differed from its Isle of Wight forerunner­s, boasting a large sail-like structure on its back and adaptation­s for a more aquatic lifestyle. (Reuters)

 ?? (Anthony Hutchings/Reuters) ?? MEAT-EATING dinosaurs ‘Ceratosuch­ops inferodios,’ in the foreground, and ‘Riparovena­tor milnerae,’ in the background, are seen in an undated artist’s rendition. Fossils of these two Cretaceous Period dinosaurs were discovered on England’s Isle of Wight.
(Anthony Hutchings/Reuters) MEAT-EATING dinosaurs ‘Ceratosuch­ops inferodios,’ in the foreground, and ‘Riparovena­tor milnerae,’ in the background, are seen in an undated artist’s rendition. Fossils of these two Cretaceous Period dinosaurs were discovered on England’s Isle of Wight.

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