You are on page 1of 4

New Big-Nosed Horned Dinosaur Found in Utah

Nasutoceratops titusi is a distant relative of Triceratops, study says.


By Christine Dell'Amore , National Geographic News
PUBLISHED JULY 16, 2013
10

An illustration shows how Nasutoceratops titusi may have looked.

ILLUSTRATION COURTESY LUKAS PANZARIN


Paleontologists have discovered a new dinosaur, a Triceratops relative
with a supersize schnoz that once roamed present-day Utah.
Nasutoceratops titusi belonged to a group of horned dinosaurs called ceratopsids,
large four-legged herbivores that thrived during the Cretaceous period, according to
a study released Tuesday. (Also see "Two-Ton "Alien" Horned Dinosaur Found
'Different From Every Other.'")
Most ceratopsids were Triceratops-style, with huge heads bearing a small horn over
the nose, a horn over each eye, and an ornate frilla bony protrusion that fanned
out over the base of the neck.

But the newfound dinosaur looked quite different, with a small horn over its oversize
nose; extremely long, curved horns over its eyes; and a simple frill without hooks
and spikes. (See pictures of bizarre dinosaurs in National Geographic magazine.)
The first part of the name Nasutoceratops titusi translates to "big nose horned face"
in Latin.
Study co-author Scott Sampson, a paleontologist at the Denver Museum of Nature
and Science, suspects Nasutoceratops were slow-moving, wandering in big herds for
protection.
The males likely used their "headgear" to compete for mates, locking those curved
horns in battles for dominance, said Sampson, whose study was published July 17 in
the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.
The horns may have also served as visual signals to other males, essentially
sending the message "don't mess with me because I'm bigger than you," Sampson
said. (Test your dinosaur knowledge.)
Paleontologist Matt Lamanna, of the Carnegie Museum of Natural History in
Pittsburgh, said that the horns may have also helped the herbivores defend
themselves.
"When you're carrying big spears on your head, if something's trying to eat you, you
might use them," said Lamanna, who was not involved in the new study.
(Related: "Two New Horned Dinosaurs Found in Utah.")
A Paleontologist's Dream
Nasutoceratops lived on Laramidia, an isolated landmass that formed when a
shallow sea flooded central North America during the Cretaceous, about 75 million
years ago.
The vegetarian dinosaur munched on plants in a swampy, Louisiana-like bayou
alongside lots of other dinosaurs not far from the coast. Sampson, a National
Geographic grantee, called it "gorgeous beachfront property, like wall-towall Jamaica."
"Just put up a few electric fences to keep out Tyrannosaurus and you'd be all set,"
he quipped. (Explore a dinosaur interactive.)
Today, said Sampson, the vast expanse of untouched badlands is a "paleontologist's
dream."
Within the continental United States, he said, "it's the last great relatively
unexplored dinosaur boneyard."

The second part of the name Nasutoceratops titusi honors Alan Titus, a
paleontologist at the Grand Staircase-Escalante National Monument in southern
Utah, which encompasses the area where the fossils were found.
Dinosaur Diversity
Nasutoceratops' wildly different appearance from other ceratopsids may testify to
the existence of two distinct communities of distantly related Cretaceous dinosaurs
on Laramidia. (See Cretaceous pictures.)
"If you were to take a time machine back to western North America 75 million years
ago and walk north from what is now southern Utah to Alberta, Canada, you'd
encounter at least two distinct sets of dinosaurs along the way," noted Lamanna,
saying such regional differences also applied to other groups of dinosaurs.
"But until recently, evidence for this type of latitudinal zonation in dinosaurs had
been very limited," making Nasutoceratops "an important discovery," he said.
Added study co-author Sampson: "This find raises some great questions and
mysteries. We're just beginning to understand the world of dinosaurs."
Follow Christine Dell'Amore on Twitter and Google.

You might also like