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Untouched on a shelf for 113 years
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Untouched on a shelf for 113 years: a dusty bone of the dinosaur no one knew existed Ian Sample, science correspondent November 15, 2007 Part-time dinosaur enthusiast Mike Taylor was looking in the shelves of the Natural History Museum in London when he found a dusty fossil. He immediately realized that the label on the fossil was wrong. For 113 years the museum thought that the fossil was from a common North American dinosaur. In fact, what Mike Taylor had found was a new dinosaur that lived 140 million years ago. The dinosaur, now named Xenoposeidon proneneukus, belonged to a family of sauropods. It was about the size of an elephant and weighed up to 7.5 tonnes. Mike Taylor found the fossil last January while he was doing some research. He was looking at bones to learn more about sauropods, the largest creatures ever to walk the Earth. Taylor was visiting the museum as part of his research at Portsmouth University. Behind grey metal doors in a dark basement in the museum are rows of shelves. Many of the museum’s 90 million fossils can be found there. Taylor found the spine fossil on a shelf, just a few floors beneath the offices of some of the most respected palaeontologists in Britain. “I was looking for two particular specimens, but before I got to those, I found this thing with a label that called it something that it was not,” he said. “I took it over to the bench, laid it down gently on sandbags, and started looking at it. The bone, a vertebra from near the hip of the creature, was discovered in Ecclesbourne Glen, near Hastings, in the early 1890s, by a fossil collector called Philip James Rufford. It was studied briefly by the English palaeontologist Richard Lydekker, and then kept at the museum. It was labelled as “Morosaurus brevis” once a common sauropod in North America. Taylor noticed features in the bone that made it clear it was from a sauropod. For example, it had large air holes that made the skeleton lighter, so that the giants could walk. But in other ways it was very different. Apart from its size, Taylor says it is almost impossible to know anything else about the dinosaur. There are three major groups of dinosaurs. The most frightening were the carnivorous theropods, among them Tyrannosaurus rex and the velociraptor. A second group is the ornithischians, such as the triceratops and stegosaurus. But the sauropods, which include the herbivorous diplodocus and brachiosaurus, were the largest of them all; they could weigh up to 70 tonnes and some were nearly 30 metres long. Angela Milner, a palaeontologist at the museum, said the Xenoposeidon was probably not the only undiscovered species in the collection. “Because the collections here are so large, some specimens have not been looked at for many, many years,” she said. “When people look at things using modern techniques, they sometimes make new discoveries and that’s why museum collections are so important.” © Guardian News & Media 2007 First published in The Guardian, 15/11/07 Download 7.3 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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