Published online: 13 June 2007; | doi:10.1038/news070611-9 / http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070611/full/070611-9.html
Giant bird-like dinosaur found
Chinese researchers unearth a surprising find.David Cyranoski
Researchers in China have unearthed the bones of a gigantic bird-like dinosaur, dwarfing anything else in its category.


| Good guess: Gigantoraptor is thought to have had a beak and feathers. Zhao Chuang and Xing Lida/IVPP |
|
Alive,
the beast is thought to have been 8 metres long, 3.5 metres high at the
hip and 1,400 kilograms in weight - 35 times as heavy as its next
largest family members and 300 times the size of smaller ones such as
Caudiperyx. It has been classified as a new species and genus:
Gigantoraptor erlianensis. The find is detailed this week in
Nature.
The
evolution of bird-like features had long been thought to be accompanied
by a decrease in size, meaning the smaller the species, the more
bird-like it is likely to be and vice versa. The new discovery shows
that isn't necessarily true.
Gigantoraptor
had long arms, bird-like legs, a toothless jaw, and probably a beak.
There are no clear signs as to whether it was feathered. However,
judging from its close affinity to other dinosaurs known to have been
feathered, Xing Xu of the Institute of Vertebrate Paleontology and
Paleoanthropology in Beijing speculates that it was.
The largest animal known to have had feathers is the extinct Stirton's thunder bird, which weighed in at 500 kilograms.


| No one expected this type of bird-like dinosaur to get so big. Li Rongshan/IVPP |
|
Comparison
of the animal with other known dinosaurs - looking at more than a
hundred characteristics, including limb proportions - puts
Gigantoraptor
firmly in the Oviraptoridae family. "We have really good diagnostic
features for oviraptorosaurs," says Xu. The jaw, he notes, is
particularly characteristic of this type of dinosaur.
"This
is a dinosaur group we've known about for a hundred years. They are
usually the size of a turkey or maybe an emu," says David Unwin, a
dinosaur expert at the University of Leicester, UK. "No one would have
predicted this. If they had, they'd be laughed at."
The bones date from the Late Cretaceous epoch, about 85 million years ago.
Accidental findThe
animal was found by accident in April 2005, when Xu was re-enacting the
find of a sauropod for a Japanese documentary film crew. While the
cameras were rolling, Xu randomly picked out a bone from a dig site in
the Gobi Desert, where a unique sauropod had previously been found. As
he started clearing away the dirt, Xu soon realized that the bone was
not from a sauropod. Its large size suggested a tyrannosaur, but he
couldn't be sure. "I told them to stop filming," recalls Xu. "I said,
'This is not for your programme.'"
Xu's
team later found an unusually complete collection of bones from the
specimen, including a nearly complete forelimb, hind limb and lower
jaw, a partial pelvis and some vertebrae.
The
Gigantoraptor's diet is a mystery. It has the small head and long neck of a herbivore, but the sharp claws of a carnivore.
Several aspects of the skeleton are still confusing to the
researchers. There's a large hole, of unknown purpose, in the
vertebrae, Xu says.
Xu
and his team also sliced through a bone to see how old the dinosaur was
when it died: they think it was 11 years old, and despite its size was
still a young adult at the time. The team says this means the animal
grew much more rapidly than North American dinosaurs. They speculate
that older creatures would have been even bigger.
Reference : Xu X.,
et al. Nature,
447
.
844
-
847
(2007).