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Asian ‘phoenix’ lived with dinosaurs

Posted in : Gossips

(added few months ago!)

Palaeontologists said on Wednesday they had found the fossilised remains of a giant bird that lived in Central Asia more than 65 million years ago, a finding which challenges theories about the diversity of early birds. The creature may have been taller than an ostrich if it had been flightless and, if it flew, had a greater wingspan than that of the albatross, they reported in the British journal Biology Letters.

The scientists have named the bird Samrukia nessovi, after a mythological Kazakh phoenix known as the samruk, and after Lev Nessov, a celebrated Russian palaeontologist who died in 1995. The estimate is based on a pair of mandibular rami, or the upright part of an L-shaped lower jawbone, that were found in Late Cretaceous sediment in Kyzylorda, southern Kazakhstan. The bones measure 275 millimetres, indicating a skull that would have been a whopping 30 centimetres (a foot) long. Whether the bird flew and what it ate are unclear because the evidence is so sketchy. But if the two bones are a guide, the beast would have stood up to three metres high and weighed more than 50 kilos if it had been flightless.

If it flew, the bird would have weighed at least 12 kilos, with a wingspan of at least four metres . The avian was “an undisputed giant,” says the study. Birds are believed to have evolved from tiny two-footed dinosaurs called theropods at the start of the Cretaceous era, around 150 million years ago. The prevailing theory, based on usually-incomplete fossils, is that they remained extremely small for tens of millions of years.

Tags : Asian, Phoenix, Dinosaurs

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(added few months ago!) / 153 views