Mysterious claw found 50 years ago identified as 1st dinosaur species unique to B.C. - Action News
Home WebMail Wednesday, November 13, 2024, 05:23 AM | Calgary | 0.6°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
British Columbia

Mysterious claw found 50 years ago identified as 1st dinosaur species unique to B.C.

A geologist's discovery of a mysterious claw in rocks along a rail line in British Columbia's northern wilderness almost 50 years ago has led to the recognition of the firstdinosaurspecies unique to the province.

Ferrisaurus sustutensis, a smaller cousin of Triceratops, roamed the area more than 67 million years ago

A Ferrisaurus is seen in this undated illustration. A geologist's discovery of a mysterious claw in rocks along a rail line in British Columbia's northern wilderness almost 50 years ago has led to the recognition of the first dinosaur species unique to the province. (Raven Amos/Royal BC Museum via the Canadian Press)

A geologist's discovery of a mysterious claw in rocks along a rail line in British Columbia's northern wilderness almost 50 years ago has led to the recognition of the firstdinosaurspecies unique to the province.

Nicknamed Buster, the partial bones, which included toes, shins and shoulder bones, formed the evidence to officially designate a newdinosaurspecies that roamed the province more than 67 million years ago, says Victoria Arbour, the Royal B.C. Museum's curator of paleontology.

Thedinosaur's species name, Ferrisaurus sustutensis, means "iron lizard from the Sustut River," Arbour said. It was discovered on a rail line along the Sustut River north of Smithers, B.C.

"I think it's really exciting that Ferrisaurus is a new species from B.C. because B.C. isn't a place that is really well known fordinosaurfossils,'' she said. "It really highlights there's a lot of potential for even moredinosaurdiscoveries down the road if we look hard enough.''

Arbour said she and colleagues spent years examining the bones before publishing their finding on Thursday in The Journal of Life and Environmental Sciences.

"We don't have any parts of the skull but we know, based on the bones we do have, that it was part of the same group of dinosaurs called the leptoceratopsids,'' she said in an interview at the museum, where the Ferrisaurus is part of a free public display called B.C.'s MountainDinosaur.

"They are little cousins of the more famous dinosaurs like Triceratops,'' said Arbour. "They had a parrot-like beak, a very short frill and no horns on the face. They were plant eaters and probably walked on four legs but might have been able to get around on two legs sometimes.''

Victoria Arbour looks over items from the paleontology collection at the Royal B.C. Museum in this undated handout photo. (Brandy Yanchyk/Canadian Press)

Ferrisaurus was about 1.75 metres long and likely weighed about 150 kilograms. She described thedinosauras similar in size to a large wild boar or a bighorn sheep. Arbour said she suspects Ferrisaurus was prey for many of the large meat-eating dinosaurs, including the notorious Tyrannosaurus rex.

Arbour led an expedition to the Sustut River site in 2017, where the bones were discovered and found new fossils, including plants and part of a turtle.

Arbour said B.C.'s rugged terrain is a major reason whydinosaurbone discoveries are rare there other than in the province's northeastcompared with Alberta and Saskatchewan, where there are large areas of flat land and exposed rocky zones.

She is planning to return to the Sustut River area in the summer to look for moredinosaurfossils.

Arbour said she originally encountered the bones in Nova Scotia as a student at Dalhousie University. She said the man who found the bones, Kenny Larsen, kept them for years but eventually donated them to the university.

The bones then made their way from Nova Scotia to the Royal B.C. Museum, where Arbour was later hired as curator of paleontology and embarked on herdinosaurspecies discovery.

"Before it had a scientific name, and we were pretty sure it was a new species, we needed something to call it and Buster seemed to be a good fit for a couple of old bones from the Sustut River,'' said Arbour.