A 70 million-year-old dinosaur species that slept like birds has been discovered by scientists

A 70 million-year-old dinosaur species that slept like birds has been discovered by scientists

A new type of dinosaur discovered recently that lived 70 million years ago has some unusual characteristics. Paleontologists discovered the fossilized bones of a new species, Jaculinykus yaruui, in the remote Gobi Desert in south Mongolia. The findings were reported in the journal PLOS One. The discovery of the newly discovered dinosaur species was an intriguing feature. Researchers discovered it in an odd resting position that is comparable to how modern birds sleep. This is an unusual find for a dinosaur in paleontological circles.

According to the researchers, this is a significant discovery since it sheds light on the evolution of avian behavior and presents a new perspective. The most intriguing part of the discovery is that the specimen was discovered in a position indicating that it was asleep when it died. The J. yaruui specimen is a nearly complete and “exceptionally” well-preserved skeleton that represents a lineage of small theropod dinosaurs known as the alvarezsaurids, according to the study’s authors.

These dinosaurs are mostly known from the Gobi Desert’s Nemegt Basin, where J. yaruui was discovered

These dinosaurs are mostly known from the Gobi Desert’s Nemegt Basin, where J. yaruui was discovered. They have also been discovered in the United States, Canada, Argentina, Uzbekistan, China, and Mongolia, among other places. According to Kohta Kubo, an author of the study from the Paleobiology Research Group at Hokkaido University in Japan, these dinosaurs featured several bird-like qualities as well as several “unique” characteristics. The fossils discovered date from the Late Jurassic period (163-145 million years ago) and the Cretaceous period (145-66 million years ago).

According to the study, Jaculinykus yaruui was a little dinosaur that stood roughly 3 feet tall and weighed less than 65 pounds. It had a light, bird-like skull with huge eye sockets, exceptionally short forelimbs with two fingers, and legs that were proportionally very lengthy in comparison to the rest of the body, signifying advanced running ability. The first half of its scientific name, “Jaculinykus,” is a combination of the name of a little dragon or snake from Greek mythology (“Jaculus”) and the Latin word “onykus,” which signifies claw. The second component of the name, “yaruui,” comes from the Mongolian word “yaruu,” which means quick or hurried.

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