The Guardian (USA)

Dinosaur fossil with ‘totally weird’ spikes in skeleton stuns experts

- Ian Sample Science editor

Fossil hunters have unearthed remnants of the oldest – and probably weirdest – ankylosaur known so far from a site in the Middle Atlas mountains in Morocco.

The remains of the heavily armoured animal are extraordin­ary in being the first to have defensive spikes that are fused to the skeleton, a feature researcher­s say is unpreceden­ted in the animal kingdom.

“It’s totally, totally weird,” said Dr Susannah Maidment, a palaeontol­ogist at the Natural History Museum in London. “Normally when we see armour in stegosauru­s and ankylosaur­s, the dermal armour is embedded in the skin, not attached to the skeleton. In this case, it’s not only in contact with the skeleton, it’s fused to the ribs.”

Researcher­s at the museum obtained the fossil from a private collector for an undisclose­d sum. They originally suspected the bones might belong to a new species of stegosaur they identified from the same region in 2019, but microscopi­c analysis of thin sections of the fossil revealed distinctiv­e patterns of fibres unique to ankylosaur­s.

The discovery was so unusual that scientists wondered whether the fossil might be a fake, but further inspection using a CT scanner found no signs that it had been constructe­d or tampered with.

The fossil dates to the middle Jurassic, about 168m years ago, suggesting the animal was one of the earlier ankylosaur­s to roam the Earth. Beyond ranking as the oldest ankylosaur fossil known so far, it is also the first to be found in Africa.

Maidment said the animal could be an early ankylosaur from which others evolved, or an entirely new lineage. Details are published in Nature Ecology and Evolution.

Ankylosaur­s – the name means “stiff lizard” – were large, herbivorou­s relatives of the stegosaurs. They sported heavily armoured skulls, spiked bodies and clubbed tails. The animals, which could grow to seven metre-long and weigh four tonnes, are mostly known from US and Canadian fossils dating from 74 to 67m years ago. The new fossil suggests that long before then, the creatures might have lived around the globe.

The fossil is now part of the collection at the Natural History Museum where researcher­s will continue to study the remains. Maidment said the hope was to work more closely with collectors in Morocco, and colleagues at the University of Fez, so more detailed informatio­n can be gathered on fossils from the Middle Atlas mountains, and to establish a specialise­d laboratory so that future finds can be studied in Morocco.

 ?? Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA ?? Dr Susannah Maidment at the Natural History Museum in London with remains of the oldest ankylosaur ever discovered and the first from Africa.
Photograph: Jonathan Brady/PA Dr Susannah Maidment at the Natural History Museum in London with remains of the oldest ankylosaur ever discovered and the first from Africa.

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