Derby Telegraph

Doctor discovers new species of dinosaur with a giant nose!

- By RICHARD CASTLE richard.castle@reachplc.com

A NEW dinosaur with an unusually large nose has been discovered by a former GP.

Dr Jeremy Lockwood spent more than 28 years treating patients in Stapenhill, Burton before his retirement in 2015.

He now has a new life as a PhD student at the University of Portsmouth, where he is a post-graduate researcher in the School of Environmen­t, Geography and Geoscience­s.

And Dr Lockwood has made a huge discovery by proving the existence of a new breed of dinosaur.

The new species, named Brighstone­us simmondsi, proves the two most common dinosaurs on the Isle of Wight – known as the “cattle of the Cretaceous” – were not alone.

Dr Lockwood embarked on the painstakin­g task of going through every single Iguanodon bone ever discovered on the Isle of Wight in the collection­s at the Natural History Museum in London and Dinosaur Isle Museum – and he was delighted to discover a remarkable nasal bone like no other.

He said: “For over 100 years, we’d only seen two types of dinosaur on the Isle of Wight – the plant-eating Iguanodon bernissart­ensis and Mantellisa­urus atherfield­ensis. I was convinced that subtle difference­s between bones would reveal a new species, so I set out to measure, photograph and study the anatomy of each bone.

“My background is medicine, so I’ve studied anatomy and was always struck by the fact that the bones we find in humans all look exactly the same.

“I’ve seen dinosaur bones that are reportedly from the same species, but I’ve been baffled as to why they would look so different.

“Last year during lockdown – after four years of going through boxes and boxes of bones – I decided to reconstruc­t the skull of a specimen, which had been in storage since 1978, and, to my astonishme­nt, I noticed the end of its nose was bulbous.

“This discovery made it one of the happiest days of lockdown because it was a sign there really was something different about this particular dinosaur from the Isle of Wight.

“Then I noticed the teeth were different with ridges on both sides, so I shared my findings with Professor Dave Martill from the University of Portsmouth and Dr Susannah Maidment from the Natural History Museum. We were all convinced it

If you want to discover a new dinosaur go into the basement of a museum rather than the field.

Dr Jeremy Lockwood

FORMER GP SPENT HOURS MEASURING BONES IN MUSEUM COLLECTION­S AND FOUND SOME THAT WERE LIKE NO OTHERS

was a new species, so I’ve spent months describing it in detail.” The bulbous nose could have been used as a sexual signal to attract females or as a warning to scare away male opponents. The new species was excavated in 1978, but was found alongside a theropod (three-toed) dinosaur Neovenator salerii, which, at the time, was the most spectacula­r meat-eating dinosaur found in Britain. Dr Lockwood said: “If you want to discover a new dinosaur go into the basement of a museum, rather than the field.

“The finding of such an impressive carnivore all those years ago overshadow­ed the bones of Brighstone­us

simmondsi, so most of it was locked away in storage.”

Brighstone­us is named after the village of Brighstone on the Isle of Wight, which is close to the excavation site and was home to the Reverend William Fox, a celebrated Victorian fossil collector whose discoverie­s had a major impact on early dinosaur research.

The latter part of the name simmondsi is in honour of Keith Simmonds, an amateur collector, who was involved in finding and excavating the specimen.

Dr Lockwood said: “When I was a little boy my father took me to an antique fair and bought me a Moroccan dinosaur bone, which was the jewel of my collection.

“To go from being the proud owner of a piece of Moroccan bone to naming a new species in England is wonderful.”

Dr Lockwood’s paper is published in the Journal of Systematic Palaeontol­ogy.

 ?? ?? An artist’s impression of what the new species, Brighstone­us simmondsi, would have looked like
The bones of the new species, and where they would have fitted in the extinct reptile
Dr Jeremy Lockwood, in Compton Bay, Isle tNhe beonews werse of Wight, where originally found
An artist’s impression of what the new species, Brighstone­us simmondsi, would have looked like The bones of the new species, and where they would have fitted in the extinct reptile Dr Jeremy Lockwood, in Compton Bay, Isle tNhe beonews werse of Wight, where originally found
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