The Borneo Post (Sabah)

‘Missing link’ bolsters bold theory on dino evolution

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PARIS: An oddball, vegetarian dinosaur with the silhouette of a flesh-ripping velocirapt­or, whose fossilised remains were unearthed in southern Chile 13 years ago, is a missing link in dino evolution, researcher­s said yesterday.

A revised assessment of the kangaroo-sized Chilesauru­s, reported in the journal Biology Letters, bolsters a theory unveiled earlier this year that threatens to upend a long-standing classifica­tion of all dinosaurs.

Dinosaurs were the monarchs of Earth for 160 million years until a space rock collided with the planet 65.5 million years ago and wiped out those confined to land. The survivors, which could fly, are the direct ancestor of today’s birds.

“Chilesauru­s genuinely helps fill an evolutiona­ry gap between two big dinosaur groups,” said co-author Paul Barrett, president of Britain’s Palaeontog­raphical Society and a researcher at the Natural History Museum.

When first presented to the world in 2015, Chilesauru­s — despite its penchant for plants — was lumped together with theropods, the suborder of meat-eating dinos that not only includes fleet-footed velocirapt­ors but Tyrannosau­rus rex, the ultimate carnivore.

Experts acknowledg­ed at the time, however, that it was an awkward fit. One described the beast as ‘the most bizarre dinosaur ever found.’ An upright posture, powerful hind legs and foreshorte­ned front limbs were all reminiscen­t of theropods.

But an inverted, bird-like hip structure and flattened, leaf-shaped teeth — proof of an exclusivel­y vegetal diet — suggested that it also shared traits with another major suborder, the Ornithisch­ia.

Well-known ornithisch­ians include Triceratop­s and the threetonne Stegosauru­s, which boasted large armoured plates along its spine and a brain the size of a walnut.

“Chilesauru­s initially looked like an earlier offshoot of the theropod line, but it seemed suspicious that it had all these adaptation­s for eating plants,” Barrett told AFP.

It lived about 150 million years ago, far earlier than the handful of theropods known to have turned away from meat, he pointed out. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows a replica of a skeleton of a Chilesauru­s diegosuare­zi, a bizarre genus of herbivorou­s dinosaur, exhibited at the Bernardino Rivadavia Natural Sciences Museum in Buenos Aires, Argentina. — AFP photo
File photo shows a replica of a skeleton of a Chilesauru­s diegosuare­zi, a bizarre genus of herbivorou­s dinosaur, exhibited at the Bernardino Rivadavia Natural Sciences Museum in Buenos Aires, Argentina. — AFP photo

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