BEIJING, July 25 (Xinhuanet) -- Japanese and
Mongolian scientists have successfully uncovered the nearly complete skeleton of
a 70-million-year-old young dinosaur, a nature museum announced Thursday.
The scientists uncovered a Tarbosaurus ¡ª related to
the giant carnivorous Tyrannosaurus ¡ª from a chunk of sandstone they dug up in
August 2006 in Mongolia's Gobi Desert in Mongolia, said Takuji Yokoyama, a
spokesman for the Hayashibara Museum of Natural Sciences, a co-organizer of the
joint research project.
"We were so lucky to have found remains that turned
out to be a complete set of all the important parts," he said.
After two years of careful preparatory work,
scientists found that the fossilized skeleton only lacked neck bones and the tip
of the tail.
Young dinosaur skeletons are hard to find in good
condition because they often are destroyed by weather decay or because they were
torn apart by predators. The latest find would be a major step toward
discovering the growth and development of dinosaurs, Yokoyama said.
The fossil, believed to have died at age 5, measured
about 6.6 feet long, he said. Adult dinosaurs of the species are believed to
have grown up to 40 feet.
The dinosaur, whose gender was unknown, came from a
geological layer created about 70 million years ago in the late Cretaceous
period.
(Agencies)