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Paleontologists reveal their most ridiculous dinosaur yet

For decades, researchers had only the arms of Deinocheirus mirificus, a preposterous-looking, duck-billed dinosaur that lived some 70 million years ago. Now, scientists have found two more complete skeletons

Scientists recently unearthed a humpbacked, ostrichlike dinosaur with huge forelimbs from sediments in Mongolia. The dinosaur, dubbed Deinocheirus mirificus, was an omnivorous theropod that tramped through muddy river bottoms hunting for fish.

Yuong-Nam Lee (KIGAM)

October 23, 2014

About 70 million years ago, a humpbacked, duck-billed dinosaur with monstrous front limbs and "mudding hooves" tramped through rivers hunting fish.

Though the odd-looking creature, namedÌýDeinocheirus mirificus, was discovered nearly 50 years ago, almost nothing was known about the mysterious creature until two new skeletons were unearthed in Mongolia recently.

"DeinocheirusÌýwas a peculiar humpbacked form with a duckbill-like skull," that could grow to the size of a,Ìýsaid study lead author Yuong-Nam Lee, a researcher at the Korea Institute of Geoscience and Mineral Resources in South Korea. []

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By analyzing the newly discovered skeletons, which were described today (Oct. 22) in the journal Nature, Lee and his colleagues were finally able to place the bizarre creature on a dinosaur family tree.

Mystery hands

In 1965, paleontologists unearthed the giant, 7.8-foot-long (2.4 meters) forelimbs of a terrifying dinosaur in Mongolia'sÌý. Because only the limbs and a few rib bones were discovered, scientists could say almost nothing about the mysterious creature, which they dubbedÌýDeinocheirus mirificus,Ìýor "unusual horrible hand."

Nearly five decades later, Lee and his colleagues were excavating a lateÌýÌýformation in Mongolia when they came upon a large quarry with broken bone blocks and loose bone fragments. The site's condition suggested that dinosaur poachers had illegally excavated the area and thenÌý, the researchers said.

After discovering the quarry, the team shipped the remaining bones to South Korea and assembled them. They soon identified the creature as the elusiveÌýDeinocheirus mirificus, minus the head and feet (which were likely stolen by the poachers.) With the first fossil skeleton assembled, the researchers looked at their own collections and realized they had anotherÌýD. mirificusÌýpartial skeleton sitting on the shelves, Lee said.

Then, in 2011, one of the study co-authors discovered that a private European collector had aÌý.Ìý The European collector had purchased the fossils from a Japanese buyer, who in turn got them from someone in Mongolia — probably the person who had taken them from the original quarry site. Like jigsaw puzzle pieces, the European fossil fragments fit perfectly with the bones that Lee and his colleagues collected in Mongolia, creating an almost complete picture of the animal.

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Odd body

The odd creature looked like something out of a "Star Wars" movie. It had a toothless, duck-billed snout, a humped back and stumpy, square-toed hooves that would have kept the dinosaur from sinking into the mud as it tramped through muddy river bottoms. It also sported a pygostyle, or a fused tailbone that supported, whichÌýD. mirificusÌýmay have waggled in a showy display, Lee told Live Science in an email.

The dinosaur was also very large: One of the creatures was 36 feet (11 m) long and weighed about 6.4 tons, Lee said.

In addition to the fossils, the team also found about 1,400 gastroliths, or gizzard stones, that the toothless dinosaurs might have used in their guts to grind up plants. Combined with fish parts found in the dinosaur's stomach area, the two suggest the animal was an omnivore.

With an almost-complete skeleton, the team was able to reconstruct theÌýDeinocheirusÌýfamily tree. The beaked creature is a member of the ornithomimosaurs, a group of dinosaurs that look superficially like ostriches, but are actually theropods, the researchers wrote in the paper. (Theropods were a group of predominantly predatory dinosaurs that includedÌýTyrannosaurus rex.)

D. mirificusdidn't look much like its ornithomimosaur cousins, however. Most of those creatures had "small skulls with large eyes and slender bodies with relatively long hind limbs," which allowed them to run, Lee said. In contrast,ÌýDeinocheirusÌýwould have had a more plodding gait.

Follow Tia Ghose onÌýÌý andÌý.ÌýFollow LiveScienceÌý,ÌýÌý&Ìý.Originally published onÌý.

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