Western Daily Press

Retired doctor discovers dinosaur with ‘unusually large’ nose

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A NEW species of dinosaur with an unusually large nose has been identified by a retired GP who spent lockdown rummaging through boxes of hundreds of old bones.

Jeremy Lockwood, who is studying for a PhD at the University of Portsmouth, set himself the task of cataloguin­g every iguanodon bone discovered on the Isle of Wight.

As the 64-year-old from Chale, near Ventnor, Isle of Wight, sorted the bones from the collection­s of the

Natural History Museum in London and the Dinosaur Isle Museum, he discovered the unique “bulbous” nasal bone.

Dr Lockwood 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.

“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.”

Dr Lockwood, working with Professor Dave Martill, from the University of Portsmouth, and Dr Susannah Maidment, from the Natural History Museum, has now named the new species Brighstone­us simmondsi, pictured, for a study published in the Journal of Systematic Palaeontol­ogy.

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