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A NEW CARNIVOROUS dinosaur, with unusually long claws, has been revealed from fossil bones discovered by opal miners in the outback town of Lightning Ridge.
"We've got tracks of things in Australia that are probably quite a bit larger - so there were bigger theropods out there - but it's good to have some actual bony elements of one of these animals," he adds.
Predators of Gondwana
Steve says the study cements the idea that megaraptorid dinosaurs were the dominant carnivores in Australia in the mid-Cretaceous, and it may suggest lower diversity in general kinds of carnivorous dinosaurs in this part of the world than experts previously thought.
Megaraptorids are a group of medium-sized carnivores - including species such as Megaraptor, Aerosteon and Orkoraptor - which lived on the southern supercontinent of Gondwana during the Cretaceous period (other landmasses joined to Australia at this time included South America, Antarctica and Africa).
Australian dinosaurs have traditionally been thought of as aberrant or relict species, which lived on the periphery of the regions that gave birth to new radiations of dinosaur species, but Phil argues that the new find may turn that idea on its head.
"Lightning Claw, at 110 million years old, is the oldest member of this group of megaraptorid dinosaurs. There is also evidence from isolated bones that these animals also existed in Victoria at around the same time as at Lightning Ridge," Phil says. "The evidence now points to an Australian origin for this group - so they first appeared here and branched out across Gondwana, colonising other parts of the supercontinent."
Poorly known Australian dinosaurs
Phil - one of the leaders of last month's Australian Geographic Society Lightning Ridge Fossil Dig - has been working for several years on studying a variety of undescribed dinosaur material alongside local palaeontologists Dr Elizabeth Smith and Jenni Brammall, based at the AOC. Italian scientists Drs Federico Fanti and Andrea Cau were also involved in studying the new material.
Several other species of dinosaur - Walgettosuchus, Rapator and Fulgurotherium - have been described from opalised fossil material found at Lightning Ridge, but each of those fossils only consists of a single bone. Lightning claw is the second most complete carnivorous Australian dinosaur known after Australovenator.
The dinosaurs of Australia are relatively poorly known, with only around 17 well-defined species, most from very fragmentary remains.
Australian Geographic Society-supported research at Lightning Ridge will be continuing on our 2016 and 2017 fossil digs. Find out more about getting involved.
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