homehome Home chatchat Notifications


Scientists discover new giant dinosaur with heart-shaped tail bones

Adorable... and useful!

Tibi Puiu
May 7, 2019 @ 3:47 pm

share Share

Artist impression of two Mnyamawamtuka. Credit: Mark Witton.

Artist impression of two Mnyamawamtuka. Credit: Mark Witton.

Scientists have announced the discovery of a new long-necked dinosaur species whose tail bones are heart-shaped. Besides being cute, the discovery might help shed more light on the broader family of titanosaurs of which the new species belongs to.

The dinosaur was first excavated from the Mtuka riverbed in Tanzania. In honor of its place of origin and Tanzanian culture, paleontologists named the newly discovered species Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia, which is Swahili for “animal of the Mtuka with a heart-shaped tail.”

The new titanosaur had a heart-shaped tail bone. Credit: Mark Witton.

The new titanosaur had a heart-shaped tail bone. Credit: Mark Witton.

The first fossils were excavated back in 2004 in a cliff wall, but it took many years of painstaking work before paleontologists could extract the bones from the rocks and compare them to other species.

In the end, all that effort paid off as the researchers had found a nearly complete 100-million-year-old skeleton of a new species, belonging to a group of dinosaurs known as the largest to ever walk the Earth. Titanosaurs could grow to be 120 feet long and weighed as much as nearly one dozen Asian elephants. Some famous members include ArgentinosaurusPuertasaurus, and Notocolossus.

Most titanosaurs were discovered in South America, which is why it’s so exciting to find one in Africa. Scientists hope that Mnyamawamtuka might help paint a broader picture of its family tree.

Researchers aren’t sure what function the heart-shaped bones might have had for Mnyamawamtuka, but two other titanosaurs have similar features, so it’s not an accidental or irrelevant development. In the future, researchers hope to use this feature to classify how various members of the huge family relate to each other, piecing together their evolution.

“A large chunk of what we know about the evolutionary history of titanosaurs comes from the many species known from South America. But during the early half of the Cretaceous, Africa and South America were still connected before they eventually split up around the halfway point of the Cretaceous,” Eric Gorscak from Midwestern University told Gizmodo. “What we’re seeing with recent discoveries from Africa, such as RukwatitanMansourasaurusShingopana, and now Mnyamawamtuka, is that titanosaurs were likely to be as diverse as their South American counterparts and there may have been a coarse division between the northern and southern half of Africa.”

The findings appeared in the journal PLOS One.

share Share

The Fat Around Your Thighs Might Be Affecting Your Mental Health

New research finds that where fat is stored—not just how much you have—might shape your mood.

New Quantum Navigation System Promises a Backup to GPS — and It’s 50 Times More Accurate

An Australian startup’s device uses Earth's magnetic field to navigate with quantum precision.

Japan Plans to Beam Solar Power from Space to Earth

The Sun never sets in space — and Japan has found a way to harness this unlimited energy.

Could This Saliva Test Catch Deadly Prostate Cancer Early?

Researchers say new genetic test detects aggressive cancers that PSA and MRIs often miss

This Tree Survives Lightning Strikes—and Uses Them to Kill Its Rivals

This rainforest giant thrives when its rivals burn

Engineers Made a Hologram You Can Actually Touch and It Feels Unreal

Users can grasp and manipulate 3D graphics in mid-air.

Musk's DOGE Fires Federal Office That Regulates Tesla's Self-Driving Cars

Mass firings hit regulators overseeing self-driving cars. How convenient.

A Rare 'Micromoon' Is Rising This Weekend and Most People Won’t Notice

Watch out for this weekend's full moon that's a little dimmer, a little smaller — and steeped in seasonal lore.

Climate Change Could Slash Personal Wealth by 40%, New Research Warns

Global warming’s economic toll may be nearly four times worse than once believed

Kawasaki Unveils a Rideable Robot Horse That Runs on Hydrogen and Moves Like an Animal

Four-legged robot rides into the hydrogen-powered future, one gallop at a time.