New Birdlike Dinosaur Discovered in Argentina

Apr 10, 2012 by News Staff

An international team of paleontologists has discovered a 70 million years old pocket of fossilized bones and unique eggs of an enigmatic birdlike dinosaur in Patagonia.

An artist’s reconstruction of Bonapartenykus ultimus (Gabriel Lio)

“What makes the discovery unique are the two eggs preserved near articulated bones of its hindlimb,” said Dr. Martin Kundrát, a study co-author and a dinosaur expert at Uppsala University, Sweden. “This is the first time the eggs are found in a close proximity to skeletal remains of an alvarezsaurid dinosaur.”

The dinosaur, called Bonapartenykus ultimus, represents the latest survivor of its kind from Gondwana, the southern landmass in the Mesozoic Era. The creature belongs to one of the most mysterious groups of dinosaurs, the Alvarezsauridae, and is one of the largest members of the family (about 2.6 m). The discovery is published in the journal Cretaceous Research.

“This shows that basal alvarezsaurids persisted in South America until Latest Cretaceous times,” Dr. Kundrát said.

Alvarezsaurid theropods are small (0.5-2.5 m) bipedal, feathered dinosaurs known from Asia, North and South America.They had a bird-like skull, tiny teeth-carrying jaws, typical robust but considerably abbreviated forearms, and one of their manual digits that developed massive phalanges including enormous claw.

B. ultimus was discovered by Dr. Jaime Powell from Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales, Argentina, but has now been described and named in honor of Dr. José Bonaparte who 1991 discovered the first alvarezsaurid in Patagonia.

The two eggs found together with the bones during the expedition might have been inside the oviducts of the Bonapartenykus female when the animal perished. On the other hand numerous eggshell fragments later found show considerable calcite resorption of the inner eggshell layer, which suggest that at least some of the eggs were incubated and contained embryos at an advanced stage of their development.

The team analyzed the eggshells and found that it did not belong to any known category of the eggshell microstructure-based taxonomy. Hence, a new egg-family, the Arraigadoolithidae, was designated and named after the owner of the site where the specimen was discovered, Mr. Alberto Arraigada.

“During inspection of the shell samples using the electron scanning microscopy I observed unusual fossilized objects inside of the pneumatic canal of the eggshells,” Dr. Kundrát said. “It turned out to be the first evidence of fungal contamination of dinosaur eggs.”

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