New species is earliest armoured dinosaur described from Asia
A new species of armoured dinosaur has been described from China.
It is the earliest fossil remains from this group to be found in Asia, adding to the understanding of how these curious dinosaurs evolved and spread around the world.
Armoured dinosaurs are some of the most recognisable dinosaurs, including famous animals such as Stegosaurus and Ankylosaurus.
In fact, one of the first dinosaurs to be named was an armoured dinosaur, a species of ankylosaur discovered in West Sussex known as Hylaeosaurus.
This new find is from an animal that lived long before any of these well-known species and is helping scientists to understand when and where the armoured dinosaurs first appeared before rapidly colonising the rest of the world.
Prof Paul Barrett, a dinosaur researcher at the Museum who focuses on herbivorous dinosaurs, helped describe the new species along with his Chinese colleagues.
'The fossil find consists of quite a complete skeleton, including bits of the skull, vertebrae, parts of the limbs and lots and lots of armour. It is the best preserved, earliest example of an armoured dinosaur from the whole of Asia.
'The armour immediately tells us it is a member of the same group of dinosaurs as stegosaurs and ankylosaurs, but the age of the dinosaur tells us it is an early member, that lies just outside of either of these two groups, and so is close to the common ancestor of both of them.'
The paper describing and naming Yuxisaurus kopchicki has been published in the journal eLife.
The origin of armoured dinosaurs
During the Jurassic and into the Cretaceous Periods a wealth of herbivorous dinosaurs evolved to be covered in extraordinary defensive bony plates, spikes and knobs.
These dinosaurs are split into the stegosaurs on one side and the ankylosaurs on the other. The more famous stegosaurs, with their ridge of plates running along their backs and spiked tails, were large bulky animals, while the hulking ankylosaurs were generally covered in flat bony shields and were more like 'walking coffee tables'.
Together, the stegosaurs and ankylosaurs are thought to have evolved from a shared ancestor and so form a group known as the thyreophorans, meaning 'shield-bearers'. But there have long been questions about when and where this group evolved.
'My colleagues in China discovered this new armoured dinosaur in Yunnan, southwest China, in rocks of Early Jurassic age dating to between 192-174 million years ago,' explains Paul. 'When we put the animal into an evolutionary analysis, it came out close to the common ancestry of stegosaurs and ankylosaurs.
'This helps to confirm that early armoured dinosaurs were living in this region at this time. We know very little about the early history in general of herbivorous dinosaurs in China, so regionally this is a really important discovery.'
'This helps to confirm that early armoured dinosaurs were living in this region at this time. We know very little about the early history in general of herbivorous dinosaurs in China, so regionally this is a really important discovery.'
In the past, thyreophoran dinosaurs have largely been associated with the rocks dating to the Late Jurassic and Cretaceous periods (163-66 million years ago) of North America and Europe. This has revealed an incredible diversity of species, but it has long been known that their origins must go much further back.
This historic paucity of finds from the southern continents has led to some suggesting that the group must have evolved in the north. But recent finds are muddying this opinion, with both the earliest known ankylosaur and stegosaur unearthed in the same rock formation in Morocco and dating to around 165 million years ago.
'There are early armoured dinosaurs starting to turn up more in the south,' explains Paul. 'There are two animals from about 200 million years ago from Venezuela and South Africa, that don't have armour, but might be the earliest members of the group, showing what they looked like before they evolved armour.
'If these animals were in the group then it is likely the armoured dinosaurs originated in the southern continents, but this idea is controversial. If they aren't included in the group, then the origins are anchored in the northern hemisphere. At the moment, we've no way to choose between these alternatives.'
A cosmopolitan dinosaur
This new discovery is not the earliest-known member of this group, but a contemporary of a number of other species from around the world, such as species in Germany and the UK. What this find does do is help to fill in the picture of what this region in China looked like at this moment in time and how these animals were evolving.
This particular formation in China has revealed other dinosaur fossils, but so far it is dominated by the large, long-necked sauropods and their early relatives. This new find adds to the diversity of the other herbivores that must have also been present in the ecosystem at the time.
The fact that Yuxisaurus dates to the Early Jurassic is also of interest. The animal is different from the other early armoured dinosaurs as it has a stockier build and a distinctive arrangement of armoured plates that would have covered its back. This suggests that these early animals were experimenting with their body shapes and ecology earlier than scientists previously thought.
'The armoured dinosaurs appeared at the start of the Jurassic and within a few million years were already evolving into quite a few different types,' explains Paul. 'In addition to that they achieved a worldwide distribution very early in their history.
'A bunch of really early members of stegosaurs and ankylosaurs from slightly later in time have been found spread around the world, so they must have been able to move across and between continents.
'Until recently, we assumed that all armoured dinosaur evolution happened in the north, but new finds are showing that this was not true.'
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