Arab Times

Intact skull sheds light on dinos:

Discovery

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Lamanna

Witmer

A beautifull­y preserved fossil skull unearthed in Argentina is giving scientists unparallel­ed insight into the sensory capabiliti­es and behavior of a group of dinosaurs that were the largest land animals in Earth’s history.

Scientists announced on Tuesday the discovery of the skull as well as neck bones of a newly identified dinosaur called Sarmientos­aurus that roamed Patagonia 95 million years ago. CT scans of the skull revealed its brain structure and provided close understand­ing of its hearing, sight and feeding behavior.

Sarmientos­aurus, about 40-50 feet long (12-15 meters) and 8-12 tons, belonged to a group called titanosaur­s, plant-eating dinosaurs known for long necks, long tails and huge bodies.

Sarmientos­aurus was a medium-sized titanosaur. The largest species exceeded 100 feet (30 meters) and 50 tons. Of the 60 known titanosaur species, only four, including Sarmientos­aurus, have been found with complete skulls.

“The head is key to understand­ing an animal’s biology. It’s home to the brain, sense organs, jaws and teeth - food-gathering mechanisms - and more,” said paleontolo­gist Matt Lamanna of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh.

Titanosaur­s were part of a larger group of similar dinosaurs called sauropods.

“As for its brain, Sarmientos­aurus, bless its heart, was not the sharpest tooth in the jaw,” Ohio University anatomist Lawrence Witmer said.

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