Skip to main contentSkip to navigationSkip to navigation
An artist’s illustration of how the dinosaur may have looked.
An artist’s illustration of how the dinosaur may have looked. Photograph: Nick Longrich/University of Bath/PA
An artist’s illustration of how the dinosaur may have looked. Photograph: Nick Longrich/University of Bath/PA

Fossil of dog-sized horned dinosaur shows east-west divide in America

This article is more than 8 years old

Unusual fossil of small cousin of Triceratops shows how continent was divided by shallow sea, allowing dinosaurs to evolve differently

A scientist has uncovered the fossil of a dog-sized horned dinosaur that roamed eastern North America up to 100 million years ago.

The fragment of jaw bone provides evidence of an east-west divide in the evolution of dinosaurs on the North American continent.

During the Late Cretaceous period, 66 to 100m years ago, the land mass was split into two continents by a shallow sea – the Western Interior Seaway – which ran from the Gulf of Mexico to the Arctic Ocean.

Dinosaurs living in the western continent, called Laramidia, were similar to those found in Asia. However, few fossils from the eastern “lost continent” of Appalachia have been discovered as dense vegetation has made it difficult to find and excavate fossils.

Dr Nick Longrich, from the Milner Centre for Evolution at the University of Bath in the UK, studied one of these rare fossils kept in the Peabody Museum at Yale University. It turned out to be from a member of the horned dinosaurs, the Ceratopsia.

Longrich was unable to identify the exact species but it had a strange twist to the jaw, causing the teeth to curve downward and outwards in a beak shape.

The jaw was also more slender than that of Ceratopsia found in western North America, suggesting the dinosaurs had different diets and evolved along distinct paths.

“Just as many animals and plants found in Australia today are quite different to those found in other parts of the world, it seems that animals in the eastern part of North America in the Late Cretaceous period evolved in a completely different way to those found in the western part of what is now North America due to a long period of isolation,” Longrich said.

“This adds to the theory that these two land masses were separated by a stretch of water, stopping animals from moving between them, causing the animals in Appalachia to evolve in a completely different direction, resulting in some pretty weird looking dinosaurs.

“Studying fossils from this period, when the sea levels were very high and the land masses across the Earth were very fragmented, is like looking at several independent experiments in dinosaur evolution.

“At the time, many land masses – eastern North America, Europe, Africa, South America, India, and Australia – were isolated by water. Each one of these island continents would have evolved its own unique dinosaurs – so there are probably many more species out there to find.”

Ceratopsia was a group of plant-eating horned dinosaurs that lived in the Cretaceous period.

The fossil Longrich studied comes from a smaller cousin of the better-known Triceratops, the Leptoceratopsids – which was about the size of a large dog.

His study, published in the journal Cretaceous Research, highlights it as the first fossil from a Ceratopsian dinosaur from this period in eastern North America.

Most viewed

Most viewed