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New fossils show how “bizarre” armoured dinosaur, Spicomellus afer, had 1 metre spikes sticking out from its neck

Research fossils show that the famous tail weapons of ankylosaurs evolved much earlier than previously thought

 

The world’s most unusual dinosaur is even stranger than first realised…

Today, research published in Nature reports that Spicomellus afer had a tail weapon more than 30 million years before any other ankylosaur, as well as a unique bony collar ringed with metre-long spikes sticking out from either side of its neck.

Spicomellus is the world’s oldest ankylosaur, having lived more than 165 million years ago in the Middle Jurassic near what is now the Moroccan town of Boulemane. It was the first ankylosaur to be found on the African continent.

The province Fes Meknes, within which the Boulemane Province has been located since 2015. Picture by Rherrad, CC BY-SA 4.0
The province Fes Meknes, within which the Boulemane Province has been located since 2015. Picture by Rherrad, CC BY-SA 4.0

New remains of Spicomellus found by a team of palaeontologists have helped to build upon the original description of the unusual animal. The initial description of the species was published in 2021 and was based on one rib bone. The team now know that the animal had bony spikes fused onto and projecting from all of its ribs, a feature not seen in any other vertebrate species living or extinct. It had long spikes, measuring 87 centimetres, which authors believe would have been even longer during the animal’s life, that emerged from a bony collar that sat around its neck.

Prof Susannah Maidment of Natural History Museum, London, and the University of Birmingham, who co-led the team of researchers said, To find such elaborate armour in an early ankylosaur changes our understanding of how these dinosaurs evolved. It shows just how significant Africa’s dinosaurs are, and how important it is to improve our understanding of them.”

Spicomellus had a diversity of plates and spikes extending from all over its body, including metre-long neck spikes, huge upwards-projecting spikes over the hips, and a whole range of long, blade-like spikes, pieces of armour made up of two long spikes, and plates down the shoulder. We’ve never seen anything like this in any animal before”

“It’s particularly strange as this is the oldest known ankylosaur, so we might expect that a later species might have inherited similar features, but they haven’t.”

Project co-lead, Professor Richard Butler of the University of Birmingham, said, “Seeing and studying the Spicomellus fossils for the first time was spine-tingling. We just couldn’t believe how weird it was and how unlike any other dinosaur, or indeed any other animal we know of alive or extinct. It turns much of what we thought we knew about ankylosaurs and their evolution on its head and demonstrates just how much there still is to learn about dinosaurs”.

Authors postulate that this array of spikes would have been used for attracting mates and showing off to rivals. Interestingly, similar display armour has not yet been found in any other ankylosaur, with later species possessing armour that probably functioned more for defence.

One explanation for this is that as larger predatory dinosaurs evolved in the Cretaceous, as well as bigger carnivorous mammals, crocodiles and snakes, the rising risk of predation could have driven ankylosaur armour to become simpler and more defensive.

One feature of early ankylosaurs that may have survived, however, is their tail weaponry. While the end of Spicomellus’ tail hasn’t been found, the bones that do survive suggest that it had a club or a similar tail weapon.

Some of the tail vertebrae are fused together to form a structure known as a handle, which has only been found in ankylosaurs with a tail club. However, all these animals lived millions of years later in the Cretaceous.

Authors of the study believe that the combination of a tail weapon and an armoured shield that protected the hips suggest that many of the ankylosaurs’ key adaptations already existed by the time of Spicomellus.

 

The discovery reinforces the importance of the fossil record in solving evolutionary puzzles and deepening our understanding of the geographic distribution of dinosaurs. It also helps to spark public imagination in dinosaurs as we learn more about the baffling characteristics of species like Spicomellus.

Professor Driss Ouarhache, lead of the Moroccan team from the Université Sidi Mohamed Ben Abdellah who co-developed the research, says, “This study is helping to drive forward Moroccan science. We’ve never seen dinosaurs like this before, and there’s still a lot more this region has to offer.”

The Spicomellus afer remains that form the basis of this study were cleaned and prepared at the Department of Geology of the Dhar El Mahraz Faculty of Sciences in Fez, Morocco, using scientific equipment provided by the University of Birmingham’s Research England International Strategy and Partnership Fund. The fossils are now catalogued and stored on this site.

The paper ‘Extreme armour in the world’s oldest ankylosaur’ is available now in Nature.

This research is part of the Natural History Museum’s Evolution of Life Research Theme that seeks to reveal the causes and consequences of evolutionary and environmental change, which is central to understanding life on Earth. It is also a contribution from the Earth Heritage Network at the University of Birmingham, which seeks to develop new ways to use palaeontological resources for the benefit of society.

Bibliographic information:

Maidment, S.C.R., Ouarhache, D., Ech-charay, K. et al. Extreme armour in the world’s oldest ankylosaur, Nature (2025), DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09453-6

 

Press release from the University of Birmingham.

Kostensuchus atrox: a crocodile-relative “hypercarnivore” from prehistoric Patagonia was 11.5ft long and weighed 250kg

Kostensuchus atrox was a top predator which lived just before the extinction of the dinosaurs, and likely chomped on them

Kostensuchus atrox – Mounted skeleton (reconstructed 3D print and painted). José Brusco, CC-BY 4.0
Kostensuchus atrox – Mounted skeleton (reconstructed 3D print and painted). José Brusco, CC-BY 4.0

A newly-discovered species of a large, crocodile-relative predator has been described via a remarkably well-preserved fossil from Argentina, according to a study published August 27, 2025, in the open-access journal PLOS One by Fernando Novas from Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales “Bernardino Rivadavia”, Argentina, and colleagues.

The Chorrillo Formation formed around 70 million years ago, during the Maastrichtian age at the very end of the Cretaceous period. At this time, southern Patagonia was a warm, seasonally humid landscape of freshwater floodplains, home to creatures like dinosaurs, turtles, frogs, and various mammals.

The new fossil unearthed in this formation is largely intact, including a skull and jaws with visible details, as well as multiple bones from the body. This crocodile-like apex predator may have reached around 3.5 meters (11.5 feet) long and weighed around 250 kilograms (551 pounds), with a wide, powerful jaw and big teeth capable of devouring large prey — likely including medium-sized dinosaurs. The researchers named the species Kostensuchus atrox, referring to the Patagonian wind known in the Tehuelche native language as the Kosten and the Egyptian crocodile-headed god known as Souchos, with atrox meaning “fierce” or “harsh”.

Kostensuchus atrox – skull already prepared, freed from the rock. José Brusco, CC-BY 4.0
Kostensuchus atrox – skull already prepared, freed from the rock. José Brusco, CC-BY 4.0

K. atrox itself is not a dinosaur, but rather a peirosaurid crocodyliform, an extinct group of reptiles related to modern crocodiles and alligators. This species is the second-largest predator known to scientists from the Maastrichtian Chorrillo Formation, and the researchers believe it was likely one of the top predators in the region. K. atrox is also the first crocodyliform fossil found in the Chorrillo Formation, and one of the most intact peirosaurid crocodyliforms ever found, giving scientists unique new insight into these prehistoric animals and their ecosystem.

Kostensuchus atrox – life restauration, 3 meters long. Art by Gabriel Diaz Yanten. Gabriel Diaz Yanten, CC-BY 4.0
Kostensuchus atrox – life restauration, 3 meters long. Art by Gabriel Diaz Yanten. Gabriel Diaz Yanten, CC-BY 4.0

Author countries: Argentina, Portugal, Japan.

Funding: DP 9282-R-22 National Geographic Society https://www.nationalgeographic.org/society/ The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. ISC Faperj E-26/200.998/2024 Fundação Carlos Chagas Filho de Amparo à Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro https://www.faperj.br/ The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript. ISC CNPq 303596/2016-3 Conselho Nacional de Desenvolvimento Científico e Tecnológico https://www.gov.br/cnpq/pt-br The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.

 

Bibliographic information:

Novas FE, Pol D, Agnolín FL, Carvalho IdS, Manabe M, Tsuihiji T, et al., A new large hypercarnivorous crocodyliform from the Maastrichtian of Southern Patagonia, Argentina, PLoS One (2025) 20(8): e0328561, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0328561

 

Press release from PLoS ONE.

ETSU fossil discovery reveals giant ancient salamander, Dynamognathus robertsoni

A giant, strong-jawed salamander once tunneled through ancient Tennessee soil.

And thanks to a fossil unearthed near East Tennessee State University, scientists now better understand how it helped shape Appalachian amphibian diversity.

The giant plethodontid salamander now joins the remarkable roster of fossils from the Gray Fossil Site & Museum.

The findings appeared in the journal Historical Biology, authored by a team of researchers from the Gray Fossil Site & Museum and ETSU: Assistant Collections Manager Davis Gunnin, Director and Professor of Geosciences Dr. Blaine Schubert, Head Curator and Associate Professor of Geosciences Dr. Joshua Samuels, Museum Specialist Keila Bredehoeft and Assistant Collections Manager Shay Maden.

“Our researchers are not only uncovering ancient life, they are modeling the kind of collaboration and curiosity that define ETSU,” said Dr. Joe Bidwell, dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. “This exciting find underscores the vital role our university plays in preserving and exploring Appalachia’s deep natural history.”

Today, Southern Appalachian forests are renowned for their diversity and abundance of salamander species, especially lungless salamanders of the family Plethodontidae. Tennessee alone is home to more than 50 different salamanders – one in eight of all living salamander species.

Dusky salamanders, common in Appalachian Mountain streams, likely evolved from burrowing ancestors, relatives of Alabama’s Red Hills salamander, a large, underground-dwelling species with a worm-like body and small limbs. Their explosive diversification began around 12 million years ago, shaping much of the region’s salamander diversity today.

A rendering of the newly discovered salamander, Dynamognathus robertsoni. Credits: Matthew Inabinett/ETSU
A rendering of the newly discovered salamander, Dynamognathus robertsoni. Credits: Matthew Inabinett/ETSU

Dynamognathus robertsoni, the powerful, long-extinct salamander recently discovered at the site, had a bite to match its name. Roughly 16 inches long, it ranked among the largest salamanders ever to crawl across the region’s ancient forests.

“Finding something that looks like a Red Hills salamander here in East Tennessee was a bit of a surprise,” Gunnin said. “Today they’re only found in a few counties in southern Alabama, and researchers thought of them as a highly specialized dead-end lineage not particularly relevant to the evolution of the dusky salamanders. Discovery of Dynamognathus robertsoni here in Southern Appalachia shows that these types of relatively large, burrowing salamanders were once more widespread in eastern North America and may have had a profound impact on the evolution of Appalachian salamander communities.”

Dynamognathus robertsoni is “the largest plethodontid salamander and one of the largest terrestrial salamanders in the world,”

Gunnin said. Dusky salamanders in the Appalachians today reach only seven inches long at their largest.

Researchers believe predators like this one may have driven the rapid evolution of Appalachian stream-dwelling salamanders, highlighting the region’s key role in salamander diversification.

“The warmer climate in Tennessee 5 million years ago, followed by cooling during the Pleistocene Ice Ages, may have restricted large, burrowing salamanders to lower latitudes, like southern Alabama, where the Red Hills salamander lives today,” said Samuels.

Maden explained the naming of this new salamander.

“This group of salamanders has unusual cranial anatomy that gives them a strong bite force, so the genus name – Dynamognathus – Greek for ‘powerful jaw,’ is given to highlight the great size and power of the salamander compared to its living relatives,” said Maden.

The species name robertsoni honors longtime Gray Fossil Site volunteer Wayne Robertson, who discovered the first specimen of the new salamander and has personally sifted through more than 50 tons of fossil-bearing sediment since 2000.

From volunteers and students to staff to faculty, the ETSU Gray Fossil Site & Museum is represented by a dynamic team of lifelong learners and is one of the many reasons ETSU is the flagship institution of Appalachia.

“The latest salamander publication is a testament to this teamwork and search for answers,” said Schubert. “When Davis Gunnin, the lead author, began volunteering at the museum as a teenager with an interest in fossil salamanders, I was thrilled, because this region is known for its salamander diversity today, and we know so little about their fossil record. Thus, the possibility of finding something exciting seemed imminent.”

 

Bibliographic information:

Gunnin, D., Schubert, B. W., Samuels, J. X., Bredehoeft, K. E., & Maden, S., A new plethodontid salamander from the Early Pliocene of northeastern Tennessee, U.S.A., and its bearing on desmognathan evolution. Historical Biology (2025), 1–25, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/08912963.2025.2501332

Press release from East Tennessee State University.

Small shelly fauna biodiversity: fossils from archaeocyathid reef systems – University of Missouri study challenges assumptions about biodiversity near Earth’s first reef systems, such as the lower Cambrian Harkless Formation, found in Nevada.

Rocky outcrops that contain the ancient reefs. Photo courtesy Sarah Jacquet
Rocky outcrops that contain the ancient reefs. Photo courtesy Sarah Jacquet

More than 514 million years ago, long before dinosaurs roamed the Earth, sponge-like creatures called archaeocyathids were already busy building some of the planet’s earliest reefs — just north of Death Valley in present-day Nevada.

Emily Edwards collects rock samples from the ancient reefs. Photo courtesy Sarah Jacquet
Emily Edwards collects rock samples from the ancient reefs. Photo courtesy Sarah Jacquet

In a recent study, University of Missouri researchers looked at how these ancient reef-building organisms shaped their environment. They also studied tiny, fossilized sea creatures called “small shelly fauna” — some of the earliest animals with hard shells ever found on Earth.

Various small shelly fossils recovered from the beds surrounding the Cambrian reefs. Scale bar is 1 mm. Photo courtesy Sarah Jacquet Small shelly fauna biodiversity: fossils from archaeocyathid reef systems, such as the lower Cambrian Harkless Formation
Small shelly fauna biodiversity: fossils from archaeocyathid reef systems, such as the lower Cambrian Harkless Formation. In the picture, various small shelly fossils recovered from the beds surrounding the Cambrian reefs. Scale bar is 1 mm. Photo courtesy Sarah Jacquet

Modern coral reefs are known as biodiversity hotspots, teeming with marine life and supporting entire ecosystems. But this study found that early reefs did not appear to boost biodiversity in the same way, Casey Bennett, a graduate student in the Department of Geological Sciences and lead author on the study, said.

“With modern reefs, biodiversity is expected to decrease as you move away from the reef structure due to reduced shelter and food access,” she said. “However, we didn’t find a consistent pattern with these ancient reefs — instead, it was pretty inconsistent and was largely dependent on localized conditions.”

This discovery offers a glimpse into how life evolved in early oceans and challenges assumptions about how ecosystems develop around reef structures. It’s a reminder that not all reefs are created equal, and understanding their ancient forms could offer insight into how modern marine systems might change.

Ancient ocean currents — and rocks

To conduct the study, the team analyzed fossil assemblages across multiple rock sections. Their results show a relatively low-diversity but high-abundance community, with some organisms dominating certain layers —possibly shaped by ancient ocean currents.

Sarah Jacquet, an assistant professor of paleontology in Mizzou’s College of Arts and Science and co-author on the study, believes hydrodynamics, or how water moved around the reef, played a significant role.

“Potentially, this happened by preferentially removing or keeping certain faunas, rather than the reef serving as a major food source for surrounding organisms,” she said.

Additionally, sediment conditions, including the type of rock, impacted the quality of fossil preservation.

“Different rock types around the reef appeared to represent different ‘sub environments’ that tended to preserve certain organisms better than others, leading to localized patches of specific fossil groups,” Bennett said.

The team emphasizes the need for continued fieldwork and fossil analysis to piece together how early reef habitats influenced the spread and organization of life in Earth’s oceans.

“Just because we know how the world works today doesn’t mean it worked the same way back then,” Jacquet said. “This research helps us step back and appreciate how life evolved under very different conditions.”

Casey Bennett and Emily Edwards sit below the ancient reefs with bags of rock samples collected from their field work. Photo courtesy Sarah Jacquet
Casey Bennett and Emily Edwards sit below the ancient reefs with bags of rock samples collected from their field work. Photo courtesy Sarah Jacquet

Bibliographic information:

Casey C. Bennett, Clare Mate, Sarah M. Jacquet, Small shelly fauna biodiversity from reef-adjacent facies of the lower Cambrian Harkless Formation, Nevada, Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, Volume 669 2025, 112922, ISSN 0031-0182, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2025.112922

 

Press release from University of Missouri, by Eric Stann

First named Pterosaur from Japan sheds light on ancient flying reptiles – Newly identified Nipponopterus mifunensis highlights international collaboration and Japan’s rich prehistoric heritage

 

A team of researchers from Japan, China, and Brazil has announced the discovery of a new species of pterosaur from the Late Cretaceous of Japan, marking the first time a pterosaur has been named based on body fossils found in the country.

The species, Nipponopterus mifunensis, was identified from a partial neck vertebra originally discovered in the 1990s in the Mifune Group geological formation in Kumamoto Prefecture, located on Japan’s southern island of Kyushu. After a detailed reassessment using advanced CT scanning provided by Kumamoto University and subsequent phylogenetic analysis, the research team concluded that the specimen represents a new genus and species within the Azhdarchidae family—a group known for containing some of the largest flying animals that ever lived. The fossil is now on public display at the Mifune Dinosaur Museum in Kumamoto Prefecture, offering visitors a rare glimpse into Japan’s ancient skies.

“This is a major step forward for Japanese paleontology,” said Dr. Naoki Ikegami from the Mifune Dinosaur Museum, “Until now, no pterosaur had been formally named from skeletal remains found in Japan. This discovery provides crucial new insight into the diversity and evolution of pterosaurs in East Asia.”

Interestingly, Nipponopterus may have had a wingspan approaching 3 to 3.5 meters and lived during the Turonian–Coniacian stages of the Late Cretaceous, making it one of the earliest known members of its lineage.

The newly identified sixth cervical vertebra (neck bone) of Nipponopterus mifunensis reveals a set of striking features not seen in any previously known species. Most notably, it has a prominent, elevated dorsal keel that runs along the back of the bone—extending not just over the epipophysis but across the entire postexapophyseal peduncle. Additional distinctive traits include a long groove running along the underside (ventral sulcus), a subtriangular-shaped condyle, and unusually positioned postexapophyses that project outward to the sides. These characteristics set Nipponopterus mifunensis apart from all other known azhdarchid pterosaurs. Phylogenetic analysis places it within the Quetzalcoatlinae subfamily, identifying it as a close relative of both the mysterious “Burkhant azhdarchid” from Mongolia and the giant Quetzalcoatlus of North America.

Published in the peer-reviewed journal Cretaceous Research, the study was the result of an international collaboration involving researchers from Shihezi University in China, the Zoology Museum at the University of São Paulo in Brazil, and a team in Japan from the Mifune Dinosaur Museum, Kumamoto University, and Hokkaido University. Researchers worked closely together, combining expertise in fossil analysis, imaging technology, analytical modeling and evolutionary studies.

“It’s a beautiful example of how science transcends borders,”

noted Professor Toshifumi Mukunoki from the Faculty of Advanced Science and Technology, Kumamoto University.

Nipponopterus mifunensis, a newly identified pterosaur known from a single neck vertebra, once soared through the ancient skies of what is now Japan. Picture Credits: Zhao Chuang
Nipponopterus mifunensis, a newly identified pterosaur known from a single neck vertebra, once soared through the ancient skies of what is now Japan. Picture Credits: Zhao Chuang

Bibliographic information:

Xuanyu Zhou, Naoki Ikegami, Rodrigo V. Pêgas, Toru Yoshinaga, Takahiro Sato, Toshifumi Mukunoki, Jun Otani, Yoshitsugu Kobayashi, Reassessment of an azhdarchid pterosaur specimen from the Mifune Group, Upper Cretaceous of Japan, Cretaceous Research Volume 167, 2025, 106046, ISSN 0195-6671, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cretres.2024.106046

Press release from Kumamoto University.

Mosura fentoni: Manitoba Museum and ROM palaeontologists discover 506-million-year-old predator

Palaeontologists at the Manitoba Museum and Royal Ontario Museum (ROM) have discovered a remarkable new 506-million-year-old predator from the Burgess Shale of Canada. The results are announced in a paper in the journal Royal Society Open Science.

Mosura fentoni was about the size of your index finger and had three eyes, spiny jointed claws, a circular mouth lined with teeth and a body with swimming flaps along its sides. These traits show it to be part of an extinct group known as the radiodonts, which also included the famous Anomalocaris canadensis, a meter-long predator that shared the waters with Mosura.

However, Mosura also possessed a feature not seen in any other radiodont: an abdomen-like body region made up of multiple segments at its back end.

Mosura has 16 tightly packed segments lined with gills at the rear end of its body. This is a neat example of evolutionary convergence with modern groups, like horseshoe crabs, woodlice, and insects, which share a batch of segments bearing respiratory organs at the rear of the body,”

says Joe Moysiuk, Curator of Palaeontology and Geology at the Manitoba Museum, who led the study.

The reason for this intriguing adaptation remains uncertain, but the researchers postulate it may be related to particular habitat preference or behavioural characteristics of Mosura that required more efficient respiration.

With its broad swimming flaps near its midsection and narrow abdomen, Mosura was nicknamed the “sea-moth” by field collectors based on its vague appearance to a moth. This inspired its scientific name, which references the fictional Japanese kaiju also known as Mothra. Only distantly related to real moths – as well as spiders, crabs, and millipedes – Mosura belongs on a much deeper branch in the evolutionary tree of these animals, collectively known as arthropods.

“Radiodonts were the first group of arthropods to branch out in the evolutionary tree, so they provide key insight into ancestral traits for the entire group. The new species emphasizes that these early arthropods were already surprisingly diverse and were adapting in a comparable way to their distant modern relatives”,

says study co-author Jean-Bernard Caron, Richard M. Ivey Curator of Invertebrate Palaeontology at ROM.

Several fossils of Mosura additionally show details of internal anatomy, including elements of the nervous system, circulatory system, and digestive tract.

“Very few fossil sites in the world offer this level of insight into soft internal anatomy. We can see traces representing bundles of nerves in the eyes that would have been involved in image processing, just like in living arthropods. The details are astounding,” Caron adds.

Instead of having arteries and veins like we do, Mosura had an “open” circulatory system, with its heart pumping blood into large internal body cavities called lacunae. These lacunae are preserved as reflective patches that fill the body and extend into the swimming flaps in the fossils.

“The well-preserved lacunae of the circulatory system in Mosura help us to interpret similar, but less clear features that we’ve seen before in other fossils. Their identity has been controversial,” adds Moysiuk, who is also a Research Associate at ROM. “It turns out that preservation of these structures is widespread, confirming the ancient origin of this type of circulatory system.”

Of the 61 fossils of Mosura, all except one were collected by ROM between 1975 and 2022, mostly from the Raymond Quarry in Yoho National Park, British Columbia. Some also came from new areas around Marble Canyon in Kootenay National Park, 40 km to the southeast, which have revealed spectacular new Burgess Shale fossils, including other radiodonts: StanleycarisCambroraster and Titanokorys. One previously unpublished specimen of Mosura was also studied that had been collected by Charles Walcott, the discoverer of the Burgess Shale.

“Museum collections, old and new, are a bottomless treasure trove of information about the past. If you think you’ve seen it all before, you just need to open up a museum drawer,” Moysiuk says.

The Burgess Shale fossil sites are located within Yoho and Kootenay National Parks and are managed by Parks Canada. Parks Canada is proud to work with leading scientific researchers to expand knowledge and understanding of this key period of Earth’s history and to share these sites with the world through award-winning guided hikes. The Burgess Shale was designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1980 due to its outstanding universal value and is now part of the larger Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks World Heritage Site.

Many radiodont fossils can be seen on display in ROM’s Willner Madge Gallery, Dawn of Life, in Toronto, and a specimen of Mosura will be exhibited for the first time at the Manitoba Museum in Winnipeg later this year.

For 50 years, ROM has been at the forefront of Burgess Shale research, uncovering dozens of new fossil sites and species. Located in the Canadian Rocky Mountain Parks of British Columbia, the Burgess Shale fossils are exceptionally preserved and provide one of the best records of marine life during the Cambrian period anywhere. Home to the world’s largest Burgess Shale collection, ROM shares these extraordinary fossils through global research, an award-winning online resource, and its newest permanent gallery: the Willner Madge Gallery, Dawn of Life.

Life reconstruction of Mosura fentoni. Art by Danielle Dufault, © ROM
Life reconstruction of Mosura fentoni. Art by Danielle Dufault, © ROM

Bibliographic information:

Moysiuk Joseph and Caron Jean-Bernard, Early evolvability in arthropod tagmosis exemplified by a new radiodont from the Burgess Shale, R. Soc. Open Sci. 2025 12242122, DOI:
http://doi.org/10.1098/rsos.242122

 

Press release from the Royal Ontario Museum – ROM

Mystery solved: Tridentinosaurus antiquus, the oldest fossil reptile from the Alps is, in part, an historical forgery

Palaeontological analysis shows renowned fossil thought to show soft tissue preservation is in fact just paint

A 280-million-year-old fossil that has baffled researchers for decades has been shown to be, in part, a forgery following new examination of the remnants.

The discovery has led the team led by Dr Valentina Rossi of University College Cork, Ireland (UCC) to urge caution in how the fossil is used in future research.

Tridentinosaurus antiquus was discovered in the Italian alps in 1931 and was thought to be an important specimen for understanding early reptile evolution.

Its body outline, appearing dark against the surrounding rock, was initially interpreted as preserved soft tissues. This led to its classification as a member of the reptile group Protorosauria.

Tridentinosaurus antiquus was discovered in the Italian alps in 1931 and was thought to be an important specimen for understanding early reptile evolution - but has now been found to be, in part a forgery. Its body outline, appearing dark against the surrounding rock, was initially interpreted as preserved soft tissues but is now known to be paint. Credits: Dr Valentina Rossi
Tridentinosaurus antiquus was discovered in the Italian alps in 1931 and was thought to be an important specimen for understanding early reptile evolution – but has now been found to be, in part a forgery. Its body outline, appearing dark against the surrounding rock, was initially interpreted as preserved soft tissues but is now known to be paint. Credits: Dr Valentina Rossi

However, this new research, published in the scientific journal Palaeontology, reveals that the fossil renowned for its remarkable preservation is mostly just black paint on a carved lizard-shaped rock surface.

The purported fossilised skin had been celebrated in articles and books but never studied in detail. The somewhat strange preservation of the fossil had left many experts uncertain about what group of reptiles this strange lizard-like animal belonged to and more generally its geological history.

Dr Rossi, of UCC’s School of Biological, Earth and Environmental Sciences, said:

“Fossil soft tissues are rare, but when found in a fossil they can reveal important biological information, for instance, the external colouration, internal anatomy and physiology.”

“The answer to all our questions was right in front of us, we had to study this fossil specimen in details to reveal its secrets – even those that perhaps we did not want to know”.

Dr Valentina Rossi with an image of Tridentinosaurus antiquus. The fossil, discovered in the Italian alps in 1931, was thought to be an important specimen for understanding early reptile evolution - but has now been found to be, in part a forgery. Its body outline, appearing dark against the surrounding rock, was initially interpreted as preserved soft tissues but is now known to be paint. Credits: Zixiao Yang
Dr Valentina Rossi with an image of Tridentinosaurus antiquus. The fossil, discovered in the Italian alps in 1931, was thought to be an important specimen for understanding early reptile evolution – but has now been found to be, in part a forgery. Its body outline, appearing dark against the surrounding rock, was initially interpreted as preserved soft tissues but is now known to be paint. Credits: Zixiao Yang

The microscopic analysis showed that the texture and composition of the material did not match that of genuine fossilised soft tissues.

Preliminary investigation using UV photography revealed that the entirety of the specimen was treated with some sort of coating material. Coating fossils with varnishes and/or lacquers was the norm in the past and sometimes is still necessary to preserve a fossil specimen in museum cabinets and exhibits. The team was hoping that beneath the coating layer, the original soft tissues were still in good condition to extract meaningful palaeobiological information.

The findings indicate that the body outline of Tridentinosaurus antiquus was artificially created, likely to enhance the appearance of the fossil. This deception misled previous researchers, and now caution is being urged when using this specimen in future studies.

The team behind this research includes contributors based in Italy at the University of Padua, Museum of Nature South Tyrol, and the Museo delle Scienze in Trento.

Co-author Prof Evelyn Kustatscher, coordinator of the project “Living with the supervolcano”, funded by the Autonomous Province of Bolzano said:

“The peculiar preservation of Tridentinosaurus had puzzled experts for decades. Now, it all makes sense. What it was described as carbonized skin, is just paint”.

However all not all is lost, and the fossil is not a complete fake. The bones of the hindlimbs, in particular, the femurs seem genuine, although poorly preserved. Moreover, the new analyses have shown the presence of tiny bony scales called osteoderms – like the scales of crocodiles – on what perhaps was the back of the animal.

This study is an example of how modern analytical palaeontology and rigorous scientific methods can resolve an almost century-old palaeontological enigma.

Bibliographic information:

Forged soft tissues revealed in the oldest fossil reptile from the early Permian of the Alps, Palaeontology (16-Feb-2024), DOI: 10.1111/pala.12690

Press release from University College Cork

New dinosaur species from Utah lived at a time of major transition: Iani smithi provides insights into how dinosaurs weather mid-Cretaceous ecological change.

Iani smithi from Utah lived at a time of major transition
Location of holotype locality for Iani smithi. (A) Global map showing location of Mussentuchit Member outcrop in central Utah, western North America, and a stratigraphic section at the quarry with dated ash horizons; and (B) graphical representation of preserved skeletal elements of the holotype specimen. Preserved elements are colored on the left facing skeletal whether they derive from the right or left side of the body. Exact positions of chevrons and ribs unknown due to poor preservation. Credits: Zanno et al., 2023, PLoS ONE, CC-BY 4.0

A new species of dinosaur from Utah sheds light on major North American ecological changes around 100 million years ago, according to a study published June 7, 2023 in the open-access journal PLoS ONE by Lindsay Zanno of the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and colleagues.

The boundary between the Early and Late Cretaceous Period saw major reassembly of global ecosystems associated with a peak in global temperatures. In the fossil record of western North America, this ecological shift has been well-documented for marine habitats, but less study has been done regarding terrestrial life. In this study, Zanno and colleagues identify a new dinosaur from the early Late Cretaceous Cedar Mountain Formation of Utah.

The new dinosaur, named Iani smithi, lived around 100 million years ago and is known from a single fossil specimen including a well-preserved skull and parts of the spine and limbs. The name derives from Ianus, a Roman deity who presided over transitions, referencing the changing world of the mid-Cretaceous.

Iani is a member of an early branch of the ornithopod dinosaurs, a group of mostly bipedal herbivores that also includes famous examples like Iguanodon and Tenontosaurus. Iani is the first early-diverging ornithopod known from the Late Cretaceous of North America.

This discovery, along with other recent reports from the same geologic formation, indicates that several major groups of dinosaurs survived into the early Late Cretaceous despite the ecological changes of the time, but exactly what these survivors were doing and how long they lasted is still unclear. Since Iani and its closest cousins are typically found in ancient coastal habitats along the shores of the now-vanished Western Interior Seaway, the authors suggest that more investigation into coastal deposits of similar age might yield further evidence to address these lingering questions.

The authors add: “Early ornithopods were once a common part of North American ecosystems, but we did not know they survived into the Late Cretaceous. The discovery of Iani helps us link their extinction on the continent with a major interval of global warming, one with striking similarities to our current climate crisis.”

Bibliographic information:

Zanno LE, Gates TA, Avrahami HM, Tucker RT, Makovicky PJ (2023) An early-diverging iguanodontian (Dinosauria: Rhabdodontomorpha) from the Late Cretaceous of North America, PLoS ONE 18(6): e0286042. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0286042

 

Press release from the Public Library of Science.

Earliest Ichthyosaur from Age of Dinosaurs found on the Arctic island of Spitsbergen

For nearly 190 years, scientists have searched for the origins of ancient sea-going reptiles from the Age of Dinosaurs. Now a team of Swedish and Norwegian palaeontologists has discovered remains of the earliest known ichthyosaur or ‘fish-lizard’ on the remote Arctic island of Spitsbergen.

Ichthyosaurs were an extinct group of marine reptiles whose fossils have been recovered worldwide. They were amongst the first land living animals to adapt to life in the open sea, and evolved a ‘fish-like’ body shape similar to modern whales. Ichthyosaurs were at the top of the food chain in the oceans while dinosaurs roamed the land, and dominated marine habitats for over 160 million years.

Reconstruction of the earliest ichthyosaur and the 250-million-year-old ecosystem found on Spitsbergen. Credits: Illustration: Esther van Hulsen
Reconstruction of the earliest ichthyosaur and the 250-million-year-old ecosystem found on Spitsbergen. Credits: Illustration: Esther van Hulsen

According to the textbooks, reptiles first ventured into the open sea after the end-Permian mass extinction, which devastated marine ecosystems and paved the way for the dawn of the Age of Dinosaurs nearly 252 million years ago. As the story goes, land-based reptiles with walking legs invaded shallow coastal environments to take advantage marine predator niches that were left vacant by this cataclysmic event.

Computed tomography image and cross-section showing internal bone structure of vertebrae from the earliest ichthyosaur. Credits: Øyvind Hammer and Jørn Hurum

Over time, these early amphibious reptiles became more efficient at swimming and eventually modified their limbs into flippers, developed a ‘fish-like’ body shape, and started giving birth to live young; thus, severing their final tie with the land by not needing to come ashore to lay eggs.The new fossils discovered on Spitsbergen are now revising this long accepted theory.

Animal remains on the ancient seabed

Close to the hunting cabins on the southern shore of Ice Fjord in western Spitsbergen, Flower’s valley cuts through snow-capped mountains exposing rock layers that were once mud at the bottom of the sea around 250 million years ago. A fast-flowing river fed by snow melt has eroded away the mudstone to reveal rounded limestone boulders called concretions.

These formed from limey sediments that settled around decomposing animal remains on the ancient seabed, subsequently preserving them in spectacular three-dimensional detail. Paleontologists today hunt for these concretions to examine the fossil traces of long-dead sea creatures.

Fossil-bearing rocks on Spitsbergen that produce the earliest ichthyosaur remains. Credits: Benjamin Kear

During an expedition in 2014, a large number of concretions were collected from Flower’s valley and shipped back to the Natural History Museum at the University of Oslo for future study. Research conducted with The Museum of Evolution at Uppsala University has now identified bony fish and bizarre ‘crocodile-like’ amphibian bones, together with 11 articulated tail vertebrae from an ichthyosaur.

Unexpectedly, these vertebrae occurred within rocks that were supposedly too old for ichthyosaurs. Also, rather than representing the textbook example of an amphibious ichthyosaur ancestor, the vertebrae are identical to those of geologically much younger larger-bodied ichthyosaurs, and even preserve internal bone microstructure showing adaptive hallmarks of fast growth, elevated metabolism and a fully oceanic lifestyle.

Before the beginning of the Age of Dinosaurs

Geochemical testing of the surrounding rock confirmed the age of the fossils at approximately two million years after the end-Permian mass extinction. Given the estimated timescale of oceanic reptile evolution, this pushes back the origin and early diversification of ichthyosaurs to before the beginning of the Age of Dinosaurs; thereby forcing a revision of the textbook interpretation and revealing that ichthyosaurs probably first radiated into marine environments prior to the extinction event.

”Excitingly, the discovery of the oldest ichthyosaur rewrites the popular vision of Age of Dinosaurs as the emergence timeframe of major reptile lineages. It now seems that at least some groups predated this landmark interval, with fossils of their most ancient ancestors still awaiting discovery in even older rocks on Spitsbergen and elsewhere in the world,” says Benjamin Kear, researcher at Museum of Evolution, Uppsala University.

 

Bibliographic information:

Kear, B.P., Engelschiøn, V.S., Hammer, Ø., Roberts, A.J. & Hurum, J.H., 2023: Earliest Triassic ichthyosaur fossils push back oceanic reptile origins. Current Biology 33(5), R1-R2. DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2022.12.053

 

Press release from Uppsala University, by Linda Koffmar.

Researchers uncover 92 fossil nests belonging to some of India’s largest dinosaurs

Fossilized eggs reveal details of titanosaur reproduction, nesting, and early life

(A) Completely unhatched egg from the clutch P43. (B) Almost fully intact circular outline of egg possibly indicating it to be unhatched and no loose eggshells are found in the clutch P6. (C) Compressed egg from clutch DR10 showing hatching window (arrow showing gap) and few eggshells collected just around the hatching window (circled) which possibly represent the remnants of hatching window. (D) Egg from clutch P26 showing curved outline. (E) Deformed egg from clutch P30 showing egg surfaces slipping past each other. Credits: Dhiman et al., 2023, PLOS ONE, CC-BY 4.0

The discovery of more than 250 fossilized eggs reveals intimate details about the lives of titanosaurs in the Indian subcontinent, according to a study published January 18, 2022 in the open-access journal PLOS ONE by Harsha Dhiman of the University of Delhi, New Delhi and colleagues.

The Lameta Formation, located in the Narmada Valley of central India, is well-known for fossils of dinosaur skeletons and eggs of the Late Cretaceous Period. Recent work in the area uncovered 92 nesting sites containing a total of 256 fossil eggs belonging to titanosaurs, which were among the largest dinosaurs to have ever lived. Detailed examination of these nests has allowed Dhiman and colleagues to make inferences about the life habits of these dinosaurs.

Researchers uncover 92 fossil nests belonging to some of India’s largest dinosaurs
Researchers uncover 92 fossil nests belonging to some of India’s largest dinosaurs. It is inferred that some of the clutches were laid close to the banks of the aquatic bodies (lakes/ponds) while others were deposited away from the lakes or ponds. The clutches laid close to the margins were prone to frequent submergence by water and thus got buried under sediment and remained unhatched, while the clutches laid away from the margins could hatch and hence showed more broken eggshells. Credits: Dhiman et al., 2023, PLOS ONE, CC-BY 4.0

The authors identified six different egg-species (oospecies), suggesting a higher diversity of titanosaurs than is represented by skeletal remains from this region. Based on the layout of the nests, the team inferred that these dinosaurs buried their eggs in shallow pits like modern-day crocodiles. Certain pathologies found in the eggs, such as a rare case of an “egg-in-egg”, indicate that titanosaur sauropods had a reproductive physiology that parallels that of birds and possibly laid their eggs in a sequential manner as seen in modern birds. The presence of many nests in the same area suggests these dinosaurs exhibited colonial nesting behavior like many modern birds. But the close spacing of the nests left little room for adult dinosaurs, supporting the idea that adults left the hatchlings (newborns) to fend for themselves.

Details of dinosaur reproductive habits can be difficult to determine. These fossil nests provide a wealth of data about some of the largest dinosaurs in history, and they come from a time shortly before the age of dinosaurs came to an end. The insights gleaned from this study contribute significantly to paleontologists’ understanding of how dinosaurs lived and evolved.

Harsha Dhiman, lead author of the research, adds: “Our research has revealed the presence of an extensive hatchery of titanosaur sauropod dinosaurs in the study area and offers new insights into the conditions of nest preservation and reproductive strategies of titanosaur sauropod dinosaurs just before they went extinct.”

Guntupalli V.R. Prasad, co-author and leader of the research team, adds: “Together with dinosaur nests from Jabalpur in the upper Narmada valley in the east and those from Balasinor in the west, the new nesting sites from Dhar District in Madhya Pradesh (Central India), covering an east-west stretch of about 1000 km, constitute one of the largest dinosaur hatcheries in the world.”

Bibliographic information:

Dhiman H, Verma V, Singh LR, Miglani V, Jha DK, Sanyal P, et al. (2023) New Late Cretaceous titanosaur sauropod dinosaur egg clutches from lower Narmada valley, India: Palaeobiology and taphonomy. PLoS ONE 18(1): e0278242. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0278242

 

Press release from PLOS – Public Library of Science