The Prague Post - Scientists discover giant bird-like dinosaur in Niger desert

EUR -
AED 4.29929
AFN 74.33939
ALL 95.5039
AMD 435.934838
ANG 2.095368
AOA 1074.676753
ARS 1613.785337
AUD 1.635497
AWG 2.10721
AZN 1.990476
BAM 1.949301
BBD 2.359045
BDT 143.711499
BGN 1.952801
BHD 0.441442
BIF 3482.873689
BMD 1.170672
BND 1.490823
BOB 8.092985
BRL 5.838902
BSD 1.1712
BTN 109.798478
BWP 15.747433
BYN 3.2954
BYR 22945.173859
BZD 2.355637
CAD 1.600367
CDF 2705.42314
CHF 0.918738
CLF 0.02648
CLP 1042.167752
CNY 7.989602
CNH 7.995176
COP 4184.836804
CRC 533.618707
CUC 1.170672
CUP 31.022812
CVE 110.514618
CZK 24.346509
DJF 208.051573
DKK 7.472547
DOP 69.830373
DZD 155.124574
EGP 60.880222
ERN 17.560082
ETB 184.088202
FJD 2.596434
FKP 0.866484
GBP 0.867017
GEL 3.148836
GGP 0.866484
GHS 12.970942
GIP 0.866484
GMD 85.458766
GNF 10275.572928
GTQ 8.952117
GYD 245.06195
HKD 9.168107
HNL 31.174415
HRK 7.534442
HTG 153.318203
HUF 364.8031
IDR 20159.266844
ILS 3.511373
IMP 0.866484
INR 109.810041
IQD 1533.580498
IRR 1544701.883268
ISK 143.793585
JEP 0.866484
JMD 185.54222
JOD 0.830078
JPY 186.706401
KES 151.145978
KGS 102.348824
KHR 4697.326213
KMF 492.853256
KPW 1053.593512
KRW 1730.896834
KWD 0.360941
KYD 0.976042
KZT 542.718332
LAK 25666.986848
LBP 104833.690105
LKR 372.17762
LRD 215.696697
LSL 19.281093
LTL 3.45669
LVL 0.708128
LYD 7.422046
MAD 10.814791
MDL 20.063027
MGA 4843.070929
MKD 61.6409
MMK 2458.023032
MNT 4189.270427
MOP 9.44826
MRU 46.849763
MUR 54.459888
MVR 18.086486
MWK 2032.287287
MXN 20.302551
MYR 4.634736
MZN 74.81809
NAD 19.280539
NGN 1577.785296
NIO 42.998126
NOK 10.890166
NPR 175.677564
NZD 1.982165
OMR 0.45007
PAB 1.17129
PEN 4.025649
PGK 5.095348
PHP 70.433523
PKR 326.529689
PLN 4.244318
PYG 7367.469309
QAR 4.26712
RON 5.091265
RSD 117.365227
RUB 87.916326
RWF 1709.181318
SAR 4.390683
SBD 9.422032
SCR 16.062921
SDG 702.984789
SEK 10.779848
SGD 1.493385
SHP 0.874025
SLE 28.856881
SLL 24548.40486
SOS 669.035561
SRD 43.851044
STD 24230.549631
STN 24.759716
SVC 10.248875
SYP 129.513213
SZL 19.281183
THB 37.765955
TJS 11.02719
TMT 4.103206
TND 3.365096
TOP 2.818698
TRY 52.593031
TTD 7.940494
TWD 36.854865
TZS 3049.601078
UAH 51.388995
UGX 4339.551052
USD 1.170672
UYU 46.564958
UZS 14130.012754
VES 564.4456
VND 30815.017291
VUV 138.077242
WST 3.174256
XAF 653.774611
XAG 0.015126
XAU 0.000248
XCD 3.1638
XCG 2.110854
XDR 0.812636
XOF 651.478478
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.381171
ZAR 19.287268
ZMK 10537.4503
ZMW 22.282618
ZWL 376.95595
  • RBGPF

    -13.5000

    69

    -19.57%

  • RIO

    2.5600

    100.28

    +2.55%

  • RYCEF

    -1.9600

    15.2

    -12.89%

  • GSK

    -0.4200

    55.7

    -0.75%

  • BTI

    1.3400

    56.17

    +2.39%

  • BCE

    -0.1700

    23.73

    -0.72%

  • CMSC

    0.1700

    22.83

    +0.74%

  • BP

    0.4600

    46.37

    +0.99%

  • BCC

    -0.2100

    82.24

    -0.26%

  • RELX

    -0.8000

    36.27

    -2.21%

  • NGG

    1.3300

    85.6

    +1.55%

  • CMSD

    0.0900

    23.13

    +0.39%

  • VOD

    0.1200

    15.31

    +0.78%

  • JRI

    -0.0500

    13

    -0.38%

  • AZN

    -0.9700

    194.81

    -0.5%

Scientists discover giant bird-like dinosaur in Niger desert
Scientists discover giant bird-like dinosaur in Niger desert / Photo: Keith Ladzinski - Fossil Lab, University of Chicago/AFP

Scientists discover giant bird-like dinosaur in Niger desert

Deep in the desert of Niger, scientists have unearthed an unknown species of dinosaur, a giant fissvery of its kind in more than a century.

Text size:

Around 95 million years ago, the Spinosaurus -- a massive beast with a blade-shaped head crest and interlocking teeth -- roamed the African continent.

Scientists believe it rivalled the fearsome Tyrannosaurus rex in size, measuring around 40 feet long with a 20-inch sword-like crest on its head.

Researchers dug up fossils that belonged to the Spinosaurus mirabilis -- or "hell heron", in the words of Paul Sereno, the University of Chicago palaeontologist and lead author of the research published in the journal Science.

"Look at the length of the skull, the length of the neck, and the length of the hind limb -- you're in heron territory."

Spinosaurus mirabilis lived when forests and rivers covered the now-barren Sahara. Previously, most spinosaurid fossils had been found near coastlines in North Africa.

Some scientists thought these fish-eating creatures may have been fully aquatic, gliding through deep waters to snare prey.

But this time, the fossils were discovered further inland, hundreds of miles from what would have been the nearest ocean.

"I think it was an animal that could have waded easily into the water," Sereno said.

"But I do not think it was a diver, I do not think it was a good swimmer."

- 'Earth-shattering site' -

The search began in 2019 in the Sahara Desert, where French geologist Hugues Faure had said he found a tooth belonging to the giant predator Carcharodontosaurus in the 1950s.

"We've got a couple of things that Faure could never dream of. We have GPS coordinates, we have drones and better vehicles," said Sereno.

The barren sands yielded nothing and the team, disheartened, headed back to their camp.

But a Tuareg man in a black trench coat approached Sereno's team on a motorcycle, claiming to know where "big bones" lay.

After a long journey through the desert, Sereno worried they "had made a mistake".

"We jokingly said, are we still in Niger? I mean, we drove for a day and a half until we had no more gas to spare because we wouldn't get back."

But eventually they reached a remote site where the "biggest bones... I have ever seen in my life" emerged from the ground.

Far out in the desert, the researchers gaped at the six-foot-long femur, the jaw, teeth, and base of the crest.

In 2022, Sereno returned with a 100-person team and 64 Nigerien guards to excavate the "earth-shattering site".

They unearthed a skull, fragments of the hind legs and several crests.

"The crest was like nothing we'd ever seen before," said Sereno.

Some were brought to tears, he said, by the "overwhelming" experience.

"It's actually like looking at a digital image of your new dinosaur and gawking over it in the tent in the middle of the Sahara."

The team realised "it was a new species... and it was going to be a landmark discovery."

"That's your Jurassic Park moment... one to remember for a lifetime."

G.Turek--TPP