Study: Dinosaur had crocodile-like skull

Published: Jan. 14, 2008 at 9:18 AM

BRISTOL, England, Jan. 14 (UPI) -- British scientists using computer modeling techniques determined an unusual fish-eating dinosaur -- the Baryonyx -- had a crocodile-like skull.

Emily Rayfield of the University of Bristol said the Baryonyx had a skull that functioned like a fish-eating crocodile, despite looking like a dinosaur. It also possessed two huge hand claws, perhaps used as grappling hooks to lift fish from the water.

Rayfield utilized computer modeling techniques commonly used to discover how a car's hood buckles during a crash to determine that while Baryonyx was eating, its skull bent and stretched in the same way as the skull of the Indian fish-eating gharial -- a crocodile with long, narrow jaws.

Baryonyx walkeri is an early Cretaceous dinosaur, approximately 125 million years old, belonging to a family called spinosaurs.

© 2008 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
Order reprints



Additional News Stories
NHL: Phoenix 3, Ottawa 2 (4 min)
NBA: Portland 90, Houston 89 (14 min)
The almanac (15 min)
NHL: Calgary 2, San Jose 1 (37 min)
COL BKB: Charlotte 87, Louisville 65 (39 min)
NBA: Orlando 126, Golden State 118 (45 min)
COL BKB: Syracuse 101, Maine 55 (51 min)
fark
Hookers in Copenhagen offering free sex to anyone who produces a government mailing warning people...
Photoshop this horse drawn carriage
"I don't want to have to kill this man, but I'll kill him graveyard dead ma'am."
Fake toilet concealed drug tunnel linking Mexico with US. Subby thought that smell was paraquat
Hokey Pokey inventor gets body put in, body put out, body put in, not shaken all about
Cambridge University discovers that some condoms on campus contain little pricks