Date: 16/08/2022 13:36:30
From: PermeateFree
ID: 1921544
Subject: Bizarre new armored dinosaur species was a two-legged tank


An artist’s illustration of Jakapil Kaniukura, a newly discovered bipedal armored dinosaur

Armored dinosaurs like Stegosaurus and Ankylosaurus were mostly big, bulky animals that walked on four legs, but paleontologists have now discovered a bizarre relative the size of a dog that strutted around on two legs.

One of the largest and most striking groups of dinosaurs were the thyreophora, herbivores that all sported thick plates and armor to protect them from predators. The most famous members of the group would be the stegosaur family, which had big plates along their backs and spiked tails, and the ankylosaurs, which were built like tanks and often had heavy clubs of bone on their tails.

But while this group were usually giants and almost exclusively quadrupedal, paleontologists have now found one that bucks the trend. The new species, named Jakapil kaniukura, had similar bony plates running up its back, neck and tail, except it was just 1.5 m (4.9 ft) long and only weighed between 4 and 7 kg (8.8 and 15.4 lb). Weirder still, it ran around on two legs, and had tiny little chicken-wing arms.

“The neck armor of this dinosaur is unique and it protected that delicate area from predator attacks,” said Sebastián Apesteguía, an author of the study. “The bones that are preserved from the arms show us that they were tiny, something that does not occur in the rest of the thyreophorans, the vast majority of which are quadrupeds.”


Jakapil Kaniukura is an armored dinosaur discovered in Patagonia

Despite its possibly fearsome appearance, Jakapil was still a herbivore. Its teeth were found to be leaf-shaped with a large face for grinding up plant matter, in a similar layout to its relatives. It also had a unique mandible that was relatively short and had a large ridge underneath.

But maybe the strangest part of all is where Jakapil fits in the family tree. It seems to be somewhat of a missing link from early thyreophoran dinosaurs to the diverse groups of later stegosaurs and ankylosaurs, which became quadrupedal as they got more armored and much heavier. The only other bipedal family member is Scutellosaurus, which lived in the early Jurassic period, some 196 million years ago, in what is now the US.

But Jakapil lived in Patagonia about 100 million years later. The team says this makes it a member of an ancient basal thyreophoran lineage that survived well into the Cretaceous – long after relatives like Stegosaurus evolved and died out. And being the first of its kind to be found in South America shows that this group was more widespread than previously thought.

The research was published in the journal Scientific Reports.

https://newatlas.com/science/jakapil-kaniukura-armored-dinosaur/

Reply Quote

Date: 16/08/2022 13:42:00
From: Cymek
ID: 1921551
Subject: re: Bizarre new armored dinosaur species was a two-legged tank

It would be interesting to see how our interpretations of how they looked matched the reality.
It would be one era to visit if time travel was possible

Reply Quote

Date: 16/08/2022 13:45:40
From: captain_spalding
ID: 1921555
Subject: re: Bizarre new armored dinosaur species was a two-legged tank

Reply Quote

Date: 16/08/2022 13:49:02
From: dv
ID: 1921559
Subject: re: Bizarre new armored dinosaur species was a two-legged tank

Nice

Reply Quote

Date: 17/08/2022 08:51:08
From: mollwollfumble
ID: 1921844
Subject: re: Bizarre new armored dinosaur species was a two-legged tank

> Armored dinosaurs like Stegosaurus and Ankylosaurus were mostly big, bulky animals that walked on four legs, but paleontologists have now discovered a bizarre relative the size of a dog that strutted around on two legs.

> The team says this makes it a member of an ancient basal thyreophoran lineage that survived well into the Cretaceous – long after relatives like Stegosaurus evolved and died out. And being the first of its kind to be found in South America shows that this group was more widespread than previously thought.

That’s new!

It does make sense, because the ancestors of all dinosaurs were all facultative bipeds, able to go about on either two legs or four. Following that, the ancestors of both the ornithischian and saurischian dinosaurs were facultative bipeds. From there they could go down either the two legged or four legged route.

So this new fossil suggests that the ankylosaurs branched off the tree early, retaining that ability to go either way.

But not necessarily. We have other instances of quadrupeds evolving into bipeds. Not often, but occasionally. Humans are one example. Kangaroos another. And the pangolin is an armoured creature that can run on two legs.

Checking the web. This is an interesting website “:Know your ankylosaurs”:https://pseudoplocephalus.com/2015/08/23/know-your-ankylosaurs-everybodys-in-this-together-edition/ The earliest true ankylosaur was in the Ordovician at the start of the upper Jurassic, so quite late. Hold on, this new fossil is a thyreophoran, so not a true ankylosaur.

I see that our Minmi is the earliest separate branch of true ankylosaurs.

Lesothosaurus was a biped.

Scelidosaurus was armoured and it is sometimes drawn as running on four legs and sometimes drawn as running on two. This is one of the thyreophora, lower Jurassic. So closest on the above chart to this new fossil.

Opposing images of scelidosaurus. On four legs or two.

On four legs.

On two legs.

Huangosaurus is usually drawn on four legs.

But is sometimes drawn with shorter front legs suggesting that it could run on two.

Australia’s minmi was about the size of a dog.

This is mymorapelta.

OK, so it all fits together. The ancestral thyreophoran was probably a facultative biped. The ankylosaurs later tended to walk about on four.

Reply Quote

Date: 17/08/2022 09:27:31
From: dv
ID: 1921851
Subject: re: Bizarre new armored dinosaur species was a two-legged tank

mollwollfumble said:


> Armored dinosaurs like Stegosaurus and Ankylosaurus were mostly big, bulky animals that walked on four legs, but paleontologists have now discovered a bizarre relative the size of a dog that strutted around on two legs.

> The team says this makes it a member of an ancient basal thyreophoran lineage that survived well into the Cretaceous – long after relatives like Stegosaurus evolved and died out. And being the first of its kind to be found in South America shows that this group was more widespread than previously thought.

That’s new!

It does make sense, because the ancestors of all dinosaurs were all facultative bipeds, able to go about on either two legs or four. Following that, the ancestors of both the ornithischian and saurischian dinosaurs were facultative bipeds. From there they could go down either the two legged or four legged route.

So this new fossil suggests that the ankylosaurs branched off the tree early, retaining that ability to go either way.

But not necessarily. We have other instances of quadrupeds evolving into bipeds. Not often, but occasionally. Humans are one example. Kangaroos another. And the pangolin is an armoured creature that can run on two legs.

Checking the web. This is an interesting website “:Know your ankylosaurs”:https://pseudoplocephalus.com/2015/08/23/know-your-ankylosaurs-everybodys-in-this-together-edition/ The earliest true ankylosaur was in the Ordovician at the start of the upper Jurassic, so quite late. Hold on, this new fossil is a thyreophoran, so not a true ankylosaur.

I see that our Minmi is the earliest separate branch of true ankylosaurs.

Lesothosaurus was a biped.

Scelidosaurus was armoured and it is sometimes drawn as running on four legs and sometimes drawn as running on two. This is one of the thyreophora, lower Jurassic. So closest on the above chart to this new fossil.

Opposing images of scelidosaurus. On four legs or two.

On four legs.

On two legs.

Huangosaurus is usually drawn on four legs.

But is sometimes drawn with shorter front legs suggesting that it could run on two.

Australia’s minmi was about the size of a dog.

This is mymorapelta.

OK, so it all fits together. The ancestral thyreophoran was probably a facultative biped. The ankylosaurs later tended to walk about on four.

The way they colour the fossils makes them look like clowns

Reply Quote