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New species: "Kosmo" the 15-horned dinosaur

Friday, 24 September 2010
Agence France-Presse

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Kosmoceratops richardsoni

This reconstruction shows Kosmo, one of two new species of large horned dinosaurs that have been unearthed in the western desert of the United States. Researchers said the ancient beasts were thought to have lived some 76 million years ago in the late Cretaceous period.

Credit: Utah Museum of Natural History

Utahceratops

This reconstruction shows the Utahceratops, one of two new species of large horned dinosaurs that have been unearthed in the western desert of the United States. The "remarkable" finds - one of the dinosaurs had a massive 2.3-metre skull, the other with a head decorated with 15 horns - were made in southern Utah.

Credit: Utah Museum of Natural History

WASHINGTON: Two new species of large horned dinosaurs - close cousins of the famous herbivorous Triceratops - have been unearthed in the western desert of the United States, palaeontologists have revealed.

The "remarkable" finds - one of the dinosaurs had a massive 2.3-metre skull, the other a head decorated with 15 horns - were made in southern Utah.

Researchers said the ancient beasts were thought to have lived some 76 million years ago in the late Cretaceous period.

Inhabitants of the lost continent

"The giant plant-eaters were inhabitants of the 'lost continent' of Laramidia, formed when a shallow sea flooded the central region of North America," according to palaeontologists, who revealed their work in an online open-access journal produced by the Public Library of Science.

The larger of the finds, with its enormous skull, was named Utahceratops gettyi, after the U.S. state, and Mike Getty, palaeontology collections manager at the Utah Museum of Natural History, who discovered the animal.

Ceratops is Ancient Greek for "horned face."

Like a giant big-headed rhino

In size and look, Mark Loewen, a co-author on the paper, described Utahceratops as "a giant rhino with a ridiculously supersized head."

Apart from a large horn over the nose, Utahceratops had short and blunt eye horns thrusting from the side of its face rather than upward, much more like the horns of modern bison.

The beast would have weighed between three or four tonnes, and stood about two metres tall at the shoulder and hips and was six to seven metres long.

Adorned with 15 ornate horns

The smaller of the dinosaurs is named the Kosmoceratops richardsoni, with kosmos being Latin for "ornate," after its elaborate collection of horns dotted around its skull.

The last part of the name is an ode to volunteer researcher Scott Richardson who discovered two skulls of the animal.

Kosmoceratops' 15 horns were located over the nose, one atop each eye, one at the tip of each cheek bone, and the remaining 10 across the rear part of bony frill, "making it the most ornate-headed dinosaur known," the study said.

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