Episode 297: Velociraptor with double sickle claws or pleasant Dodoraptor?


Episode 297 is all about Balaur, the “stocky dragon” from Hateg island, well-known for its pair of sickle-shaped claws on every foot.

Huge due to all our patrons! Your assist means a lot to us and retains us going! When you’re a dinosaur fanatic, be a part of our rising group on Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/iknowdino.

You’ll be able to take heed to our free podcast, with all our episodes, on Apple Podcasts at:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/i-know-dino/id960976813?mt=2

On this episode, we talk about:

Information:

  • The “Dinosaur born from fireplace” Aratasaurus was described in Brazil supply
  • The Curiosity Rover on Mars has a brand new drill goal that the workforce has named Mary Anning supply
  • A latest storm in Glasgow, Virginia broken a dinosaur sculpture, however the locals have already repaired it supply
  • A brand new article explores how the Cabazon dinosaurs ended up on the I-10 in Southern California supply
  • The Bass Coast Shire is seeking to make a 50km dinosaur themed strolling path to advertise the fossils present in Victoria, Australia supply
  • There’s a new B-movie known as Ebola Rex, however don’t anticipate an excessive amount of supply
  • The lovable dinosaur theme park simulation recreation Parkasaurus might be getting a v1 launch on August 13 supply

The dinosaur of the day: Balaur

  • Theropod that lived within the Late Cretaceous in what’s now Romania (Ha?eg Island)
  • Comparable in dimension to Velociraptor
  • Estimated to be round 5.9 to six.9 ft (1.8 to 2.1 m) lengthy
  • Had two giant, retractable, sickle-shaped claws on every foot (as a substitute of 1, like Velociraptor)
  • Re-evolved a purposeful first toe, to assist assist its weight, which additionally had a big sickle claw
  • First toe rotated ahead and supported the second sickle claw
  • Had quick, stocky ft and legs, and huge muscle attachment areas on the pelvis, so in all probability was sturdy, however not that quick
  • Limbs had been proportionally shorter and heavier in comparison with relations
  • Curved toe claws will not be too curved (much less curved than dromaeosaurids, and comparable in form and curvature as Mesozoic birds)
  • Ft and legs had been quick and stocky, with fused bones
  • Pubic bones are swept again and bow outwards
  • Secondarily flightless
  • Third digit on its hand was small and doubtless nonfunctional, mainly solely had two fingers on every hand
  • Kind species is Balaur bondoc
  • Genus title refers to a many-headed dragon in Romanian folklore, generally thought to have wings (often evil)
  • Species title means “stocky”
  • Full title is “stocky dragon”
  • Named stocky due to its muscle groups in comparison with relations
  • Described in 2010 by Zoltán Csiki and others
  • Discovered two partial skeletons (Ha?eg Island)
  • First fossils present in 1997 by Dan Grigorescu, (elements of the entrance limbs), although was considered an oviraptorosaur (arm was so unusual it was laborious to appropriately piece collectively)
  • Partial skeleton present in 2009, which turned the holotype. Discovered by geologist and paleontologist Mátyás Vremir (identified for locating many Transylvanian fossils, who not too long ago handed away, July 2020 at age 50)
  • Discovered within the Sebe? Formation, crimson floodplain mudstone
  • Discovered vertebrae, plenty of the pectoral and pelvic girdles, and plenty of the limbs
  • 1997 fossils had been from a person about 45% longer than the holotype, and was present in a youthful stratum
  • Csiki and others stated its physique was “a dramatic instance of aberrant morphology developed in island-dwelling taxa”
  • Ha?eg Island is named the “island of dwarf dinosaurs” (just like the dwarf sauropod Magyarosaurus)
  • Strangeness might be as a result of it’s an island dinosaur (“island impact”), although it wasn’t small
  • Exhausting to categorise. Over time has been labeled as dromaeosaurid, basal avialan, however nothing definitive
  • No cranium discovered, so unclear if it was carnivorous or herbivorous
  • Initially considered carnivorous, as a result of initially considered carefully associated to Velociraptor
  • Csiki thought it might have been an apex predator on the island, and should have used its claws to slash prey
  • Newer research, by Denver Fowler and others, discovered that the ft of paravians possible used their claws to pin prey to the bottom, and used their proto-wings to remain on prime of their prey, after which eat their prey whereas it was nonetheless alive, like some trendy birds. Primarily based on the big first claw and fused metatarsus (group of bones within the foot), Balaur was bird-like and doubtless a predator
  • Andrea Cau urged Balaur might have been an omnivore or herbivore, and that’s why it had unusual options. One instance is it’s lacking the third digit (finger) on its fingers. The claw and huge first toe might have helped assist its weight. Additionally Balaur was quick and stocky, with a large pubis, so might have had giant intestines to digest plant matter. Cau known as this the “Dodoraptor” mannequin. However after Fowler’s analysis, Cau stated that Balaur might have been a predator
  • Nonetheless, in 2015, Cau and others did a phylogenetic evaluation, and whereas inconclusive, discovered Balaur was carefully associated to avialan herbivores, similar to Sapeornis and Jeholornis, and that the the broad pelvic canal, and different options, had been “a mixture of options convergently acquired solely by the non-predatory clade Therizinosauridae amongst Mesozoic theropods”, and Balaur might have been herbivorous
  • Arms had been atrophied, not very helpful, so would have used ft for prey
  • Claws might have helped with climbing and perching, not slashing prey
  • Had numerous bird-like options, just like the fusion of its limb bones, the massive first toes, the primary toe claw being comparable in dimension to the second toe claw, and so forth.

Enjoyable Truth:
Ghost taxa (or ghost lineages) exist in nearly each animal group. It’s mainly any hole within the fossil report.



Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *