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First nut-eating dinosaur revealed

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Published: June 25, 2009 at 12:55 PM
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CHICAGO, June 25 (UPI) -- University of Chicago paleontologist Paul Sereno says Psittacosaurus gobiensis is the first evidence found of a dinosaur species that ate mainly nuts.

Sereno, who discovered fossil of the 3-foot-long dinosaur in Inner Mongolia in 2001, said the skull features of the dinosaur that lived 110 million years ago are reminiscent of a parrot, the Chicago Sun-Times reported Thursday.

"The parallels in the skull to that in parrots, the descendants of dinosaurs most famous for their nut-cracking habits, is remarkable," said Sereno, who was aided in the discovery by two colleagues from China.

Sereno also pointed out in the journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B how the fossilized remains of the dinosaur species revealed a unique digestive system.

"The Psittacosaurus at hand has a huge pile of stomach stones, more than 50, to grind away at whatever it eats, and this is totally out of proportion to its 3-foot body length," the paleontologist said.

The Sun-Times said the details of the nut-eating dinosaur species support theories that dinosaurs were ancestors to modern birds.

Topics: Paul Sereno
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