• Email Us: [email protected]
  • Contact Us: +1 718 874 1545
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Medical Market Report

  • Home
  • All Reports
  • About Us
  • Contact Us

800-Kilogram Ostrich-Like Dinosaurs Stomped Around Mississippi 85 Million Years Ago

October 19, 2022 by Deborah Bloomfield

North America was once home to enormous ostrich-like dinosaurs called ornithomimosaurs, new research has found, and some of the largest known to have existed were stomping around what’s now called Mississippi. Clocking in at 800 kilograms (1,764 pounds) in weight, the “bird-mimic” dinosaurs had little heads on top of long necks as well as long legs and arms with round bodies.

New specimens that lived around 85 million years ago are teaching us new things about the existence of ornithomimosaurs in North America, a place which, during the Late Cretaceous, was separated into two landmasses by the ocean. To the west, we had Laramidia, while to the east sat Appalachia, which is where the focal specimens of a new study once lived.

Advertisement

The retrieved specimens were studied by a research team led by Chinzorig Tsogtbaatar of the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences. They were taken from the Santonian Eutaw Formation of Mississippi and subjected to morphological and histological investigations.

Such research represents an exciting opportunity to fill in gaps in our knowledge of the animals that lived in eastern North America during the Late Cretaceous, a period in time that has gone somewhat understudied here owing to the rarity of sediment deposits containing vertebrate fossils in the region, write the researchers.

Excitingly, their findings “suggest the presence of two taxa of different body sizes, including one of the largest ornithomimosaurians known worldwide.”

ornithomimosaurs
Paleohistological transverse sections of the large- and medium-bodied Eutaw ornithomimosaurs, and their comparative size within known ornithomimosaur taxa through a geological time. Image credit: Tsogtbaatar et al., CC BY 4.0

The researchers were able to reach their conclusions by comparing growth patterns within the specimens’ fossilized bones which told them they were looking at two types of ornithomimosaurs of different sizes. The bigger of the two would’ve weighed more than 800 kilograms – more than an adult giraffe – and was still growing, likely placing it among the largest ornithomimosaurs on the planet (that we know about, you never know when the next true Big Bird might pop up).

The discovery of the asymmetric pair lends to existing research that has found ornithomimosaurs weren’t afraid of living next door to different species, and often these cohabiting species were very different in size with some being very, very large. The researchers hope next to further investigate why such different animals were well suited to their shared environment.

“The co-existence of medium- and large-bodied ornithomimosaur taxa during the Late Cretaceous Santonian of North America does not only provide key information on the diversity and distribution of North American ornithomimosaurs from the Appalachian landmass, but it also suggests broader evidence of multiple cohabiting species of ornithomimosaurian dinosaurs in Late Cretaceous ecosystems of Laurasia,” they concluded.

Advertisement

The study is published in PLOS ONE.

Deborah Bloomfield
Deborah Bloomfield

Related posts:

  1. Tennis – Raducanu hits Met Gala red carpet in New York victory lap
  2. Apple updates iPads for work-from-home as new 5G iPhones expected
  3. Philippines kicks off election season under pandemic cloud
  4. Explainer: Is Cannabis Use Causing Heart Attacks In Young People?

Source Link: 800-Kilogram Ostrich-Like Dinosaurs Stomped Around Mississippi 85 Million Years Ago

Filed Under: News

Primary Sidebar

  • How Should NASA Respond If We Found An Alien Technosignature?
  • First-Ever Footage Of Tooting Two-Toed Sloth Dispels Idea That Sloths Don’t Fart
  • Over 86,000 Earthquakes Have Been Detected Under Yellowstone Using AI
  • China Begins Building The World’s Largest $167 Billion Hydropower Megadam
  • COVID-19 May Have Aged Our Brains, Even Before We Actually Caught The Virus
  • “King Cheetah”: Hybrid, New Species, Or Mutation?
  • New Plasma Waves Over Jupiter’s North Pole Have Never Been Seen Before In The Solar System
  • American Astronomer Finds Two New Moons Around Jupiter. His Record May Never Be Beaten.
  • Optimists’ Brains Work The Same Way, While Pessimists Dream Up Their Own Disasters
  • The Great Attractor: Our Galaxy Is Being Pulled Towards An “Unknown Structure” 300 Million Light-Years Across
  • Could We Be On Track Towards A Universal Cancer Vaccine? New Findings Say: Maybe
  • The “Weekend Effect” Of Weather: Is It Rainier On Saturdays And Sundays?
  • Forget Polar Bears: The Largest Bear To Live In North America Was The 3.3-Meter-Tall Short-Faced Bear
  • Earth’s Rotation Will Speed Up Tomorrow, Set To Make The Day 1.34 Milliseconds Shorter
  • Interstellar Comet 3I/ATLAS Caught By Rubin Observatory In Unplanned First Science Study
  • It Looks Like We’ve Found Betel-Buddy, Betelgeuse’s Suspected Companion Star
  • Silky Anteater: The World’s Smallest Anteater Pulls Out A Surprising Power Move When Threatened
  • Some People Have More Babies Of One Sex – Now We Might Know Why
  • Huge Benefits To Health And Happiness Revealed By New 4-Day Workweek Trial
  • Doctors Find 2 New Ways To Bring “Dead” Hearts Back To Life Outside The Body
  • Business
  • Health
  • News
  • Science
  • Technology
  • +1 718 874 1545
  • +91 78878 22626
  • [email protected]
Office Address
Prudour Pvt. Ltd. 420 Lexington Avenue Suite 300 New York City, NY 10170.

Powered by Prudour Network

Copyrights © 2025 · Medical Market Report. All Rights Reserved.

Go to mobile version