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Scientists discover diminutive dinosaur that roamed Arctic 70 million years ago

By on March 13, 2014


Photo courtesy of Perot Museum of Nature and Science
Photo courtesy of Perot Museum of Nature and Science

Scientists have discovered a new species of dinosaur that roamed the Arctic 70 million years ago.

Nanuqsaurus (NA-nook-sore-us) hoglundi (hog-LUNDY) is a tiny cousin of the Tyrannosaurus rex that lived in northern Alaska, close to the Yukon border on the Beaufort Sea.

Dr. Tony Fiorillo (fee-o-rillo) of the Perot Museum of Nature and Science in Texas says the fossil fragments of the skull and jaw were found in what is known as the Prince Creek Formation.

Fiorillo says the tiny tyrranosaur was about half the size of the T. rex, with a skull about 64 centimetres long and standing less than three metres high.

His team believes the creature was smaller because it had to adapt to the arctic climate of the day, which was warmer and more heavily forested in the Cretaceous period.

The finding is published in the latest edition of the scientific journal PLOS-ONE.

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