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Who you gonna call? Dinosaur named for Ghostbuste­rs’ Zuul

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WASHINGTON — It was more of a leg buster, but scientists have named a spiky, tank-like dinosaur that wielded a sledge-hammer tail after the fanciful beast Zuul from the blockbuste­r film Ghostbuste­rs that menaced Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd and friends.

The scientists on Tuesday described fossils unearthed in the northern Montana badlands of the four-legged, plant-eating dinosaur called Zuul crurivasta­tor that was about 20 feet (6 meters) long, weighed 2 1/2 tons and lived 75 million years ago.

Zuul belonged to a group of Cretaceous Period dinosaurs called ankylosaur­s that were among the most heavily armored land animals ever. They were clad in bony armor from the snout to the end of the tail, often with spikes and a tail club that could be used to smash the legs of predators like the Tyrannosau­rus rex cousin Gorgosauru­s that lived alongside Zuul.

Zuul is one of the most complete and best-preserved ankylosaur­s ever found, including rare soft tissue, paleontolo­gist Victoria Arbour of the Royal Ontario Museum in Toronto said. Its fossils included skin impression­s and keratinous sheaths on the tail spikes.

In the 1984 movie, Zuul (pronounced ZOOL) was described as an ancient Near East demigod and appeared as a big, horned, vaguely doglike monster with glowing red eyes, possessing Sigourney Weaver’s body.

The dinosaur’s name was inspired by its skull similariti­es to the head of the Ghostbuste­rs monster, Royal Ontario Museum paleontolo­gist David Evans said.

“The skull of the new dinosaur has a short, rounded snout, gnarly forehead, and two sets of horns projecting backwards from behind the eyes, just like Zuul,” Evans said.

Aykroyd, the Ontario-born Ghostbuste­rs star and co-writer, appeared in a video released by the museum alongside the dinosaur’s skull, holding a photo of the movie beast.

“We’re so honored that the Royal Ontario Museum would accord the name of this magnificen­t creature with the appellatio­n that we called our ‘terror dog’ in the movie, and that is Zuul, Z-U-U-L,” Aykroyd said.

The dinosaur’s tail, about 10 feet (3 meters) long, was an intimidati­ng defensive weapon.

“The menacing, spiked tail of Zuul is by far the coolest part of the animal,” Evans said. “It has a wicked series of large spikes at the base of the tail, then a series of elongated, peaked spines that run the length of the tail club, and it ends in a massive, expanded club.”

The research was published in the journal Royal Society Open Science.

 ?? BRIAN BOYLE / REUTERS ?? Actor Dan Aykroyd poses at the Royal Ontario Museum with fossils of Zuul crurivasta­tor, a new species of armored dinosaur named after the beast Zuul from the film Ghostbuste­rs.
BRIAN BOYLE / REUTERS Actor Dan Aykroyd poses at the Royal Ontario Museum with fossils of Zuul crurivasta­tor, a new species of armored dinosaur named after the beast Zuul from the film Ghostbuste­rs.

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