New dinosaur species wore its 'heart' on tail

Highlights
- The plant-eating dinosaur was discovered in Africa and reportedly lived 100 million years ago
- It was also extremely large when it walked the Earth, and it weighed up to 20 tons
- Apart from its vast size, the 30-foot dinosaur also displayed another fascinating feature - heart-shaped bones in its tail
The dinosaur discovered in Southwestern Tanzania is yet another member of the large, long-necked titanosaur sauropods, said researchers at the Ohio University in the US.
The partial skeleton was recovered from Cretaceous-age — 145.5 million to 65.5 million years ago — rocks exposed in a cliff surface in the western branch of the great East African Rift System, according to the study published in the journal PLOS ONE.
The dinosaur is called Mnyamawamtuka moyowamkia in reference to the name of the riverbed (Mtuka) in which it was discovered and due to the unique shape of its tail bones.
The initial discovery of Mnyamawamtuka took place in 2004, when part of the skeleton was found high in a cliff wall overlooking the seasonally dry Mtuka riverbed, with annual excavations continuing through 2008.
"The wealth of information from the skeleton indicates it was distantly related to other known African titanosaurs, except for some interesting similarities with another dinosaur, Malawisaurus, from just across the Tanzania-Malawi border," said Gorscak, current research associate at the Field Museum of Natural History in the US.
Titanosaurs are best known from Cretaceous-age rocks in South America, but other efforts by the team include new species discovered in Tanzania, Egypt, and other parts of the African continent that reveal a more complex picture of dinosaurian evolution on the planet.
"The discovery of dinosaurs like Mnyamawamtuka and others we have recently discovered is like doing a four-dimensional connect the dots," said Patrick O'Connor, a professor at Ohio University.
Mnyamawamtuka and the other Tanzanian titanosaurs are not the only animals discovered by the research team.
Such findings from the East African Rift provide a crucial glimpse into ancient ecosystems of Africa and provide the impetus for future work elsewhere on the continent.
The Economic Times Business News App for the Latest News in Business, Sensex, Stock Market Updates & More.
The Economic Times News App for Quarterly Results, Latest News in ITR, Business, Share Market, Live Sensex News & More.