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A cameraman films a replica of the
Maxakalisaurus topai that is presented during a news conference by
researchers from the Federal University of Rio de Janeiro August 28, 2006.
(Xinhua/Reuters Photo) Photo Gallery
>>> | BEIJING, Aug. 30 --
Brazilian paleontologists have discovered a new giant dinosaur species based on
fossilized fragments of the herbivorous reptile that lived 80 million years
ago.
The Maxakalisaurus topai, of the Titanosauria group,
was 13 metres long and weighed about nine tons.
It had a large body, long tail and neck with a
relatively small head. Some of the bones found had the marks of teeth on them,
which led scientists to believe that the specimen was devoured by carnivorous
dinosaurs after its death.
The fossils date back to the Late Cretaceous period.
They were found during excavations between 1998 and 2002 next to a highway in a
place called Serra da Boa Vista in central-southern Minas Gerais state. It then
took some time for the scientists to categorize the species and reconstruct the
skeleton.
The name of the species, Maxakalisaurus topai,
derives from an Indian tribe, Maxakali, which lives in the area. Topa is a
divinity that the tribe worships. It is a custom in Brazil to give native Indian
names to paleontological finds.
The find is extremely important as Maxakalisaurus
topai is closely related to a highly evolved group of dinosaurs, called the
Saltasaurinae, researcher Alexander Kellner said on Monday after presenting a
reconstructed skeleton of the reptile in the National Museum in Rio de Janeiro.
The Saltasaurinae lived more than 70 million years
ago and the fossils have only been found in Argentina.
"Among its specific traits are some peculiarities
that we found in the vertebrae, especially a protuberating sacral vertebra ...
It also has teeth with carinae (ridges), which we think served to better process
the food," Kellner said.
Dinosaurs from the Titanosauria group were the main
herbivorous dinosaurs of the ancient super-continent known as Gondwana, which
grouped Australia, India, Africa, South America and Antarctica some 200 million
years ago.
Some scientists believe a connection still existed
between what is now South America, Antarctica, India and possibly Australia
until about 70 million years ago.
(Source: China Daily/Agencies)
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