Morphosaurs

Sunday, August 1st, 2010

My childhood knowledge of dinosaurs is drifting away — not from senescence but from obsolescence. First they went from slow and cold-blooded to quick and warm-blooded. Then the brontosaur reverted to the apatosaur. Now the triceratops may be a torosaur:

Triceratops had three facial horns and a short, thick neck-frill with a saw-toothed edge. Torosaurus also had three horns, though at different angles, and a much longer, thinner, smooth-edged frill with two large holes in it. So it’s not surprising that Othniel Marsh, who discovered both in the late 1800s, considered them to be separate species.

Now [ John Scannella and Jack Horner at the Museum of the Rockies in Bozeman, Montana] say that triceratops is merely the juvenile form of torosaurus. As the animal aged, its horns changed shape and orientation and its frill became longer, thinner and less jagged. Finally it became fenestrated, producing the classic torosaurus form (see diagram, [left]).

This extreme shape-shifting was possible because the bone tissue in the frill and horns stayed immature, spongy and riddled with blood vessels, never fully hardening into solid bone as happens in most animals during early adulthood. The only modern animal known to do anything similar is the cassowary, descended from the dinosaurs, which develops a large spongy crest when its skull is about 80 per cent fully grown.

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