Skull sheds light on long-necked dinosaurs

Scietntists say a perfectly preserved skill of a Sarmientosaurus gives them great insight into how one of the earth's largest animals moved and thought.

A beautifully preserved fossil skull unearthed in Argentina is giving scientists unparalleled insight into the sensory capabilities and behaviour of a group of dinosaurs that were the largest land animals in Earth's history.

Scientists announced on Tuesday the discovery of the skull as well as neck bones of a newly identified dinosaur called Sarmientosaurus that roamed Patagonia 95 million years ago.

CT scans of the skull revealed its brain structure and provided close understanding of its hearing, sight and feeding behaviour.

Sarmientosaurus, about 412-15 meters and eight-12 tons, belonged to a group called titanosaurs, plant-eating dinosaurs known for long necks, long tails and huge bodies.

Sarmientosaurus was a medium-sized titanosaur.

The largest species exceeded 30 meters and 50 tons.

Of the 60 known titanosaur species, only four, including Sarmientosaurus, have been found with complete skulls.

"The head is key to understanding an animal's biology. It's home to the brain, sense organs, jaws and teeth - food-gathering mechanisms - and more," said paleontologist Matt Lamanna of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in Pittsburgh.

Titanosaurs were part of a larger group of similar dinosaurs called sauropods.

"As for its brain, Sarmientosaurus, bless its heart, was not the sharpest tooth in the jaw," Ohio University anatomist Lawrence Witmer said.

The Sarmientosaurus' brain was about the size of a lime yet its body weighed as much as two or three elephants, Witmer said.

Its hearing organ, the cochlear duct, was long, indicating good hearing of low-frequency sounds transmitted over long distances, perhaps to keep track of other members of the herd when they were out of sight, Witmer said.

Its eye sockets and eyeballs were relatively large, suggesting vision was particularly important for Sarmientosaurus, Witmer added.

Its inner ear orientation on the skull indicates Sarmientosaurus had a nose-down head posture and that it fed mostly on ground plants rather than cropping leaves from tall trees, Witmer said.


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Source: AAP



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