Fossil Science
Recent News |  Archives |  Tags |  About |  Newsletter |  Submit News |  Links |  Subscribe to FossilScience.com RSS Feed Subscribe
New Articles
UK scientists help museum curators to determine Viking trade routes by the metal in their swords 1/6/2009

Study shows competition, not climate change, led to Neanderthal extinction 12/30/2008

Life on Earth got bigger in 2-million-fold leaps, says researcher 12/24/2008

Archaeological discovery: Earliest evidence of our cave-dwelling human ancestors 12/22/2008

Passage graves from an astronomical perspective 12/21/2008

Polygamy, paternal care in birds linked to dinosaur ancestors 12/20/2008

'Hobbit' fossils represent a new species, concludes anthropologist 12/18/2008

Gibbon feet provide model for early human walking 12/17/2008

Iron Age 'sacrifice' is Britain's oldest surviving brain 12/16/2008

CT scans reveal that dinosaurs were airheads 12/11/2008

Late Neandertals and modern human contact in southeastern Iberia 12/10/2008

Oetzi's last supper 12/3/2008

Evidence from dirty teeth: Ancient Peruvians ate well 12/2/2008

New excavations strengthen identification of Herod's grave at Herodium 11/30/2008

Study of oldest turtle fossil 11/29/2008

Study of polar dinosaur migration questions whether dinosaurs were truly the first great migrators (10/24/2008)

Tags:
dinosaurs

Contrary to popular belief, polar dinosaurs may not have traveled nearly as far as originally thought when making their bi-annual migration.

University of Alberta researchers Phil Bell and Eric Snively have suggested that while some dinosaurs may have migrated during the winter season, their range was significantly less than previously thought, which means their treks were shorter. Bell and Snively's findings were recently published in Alcheringa: An Australasian Journal of Paleontology.

The idea that these animals may have travelled distances nine times further than mule deer or four times those of wildebeest would have made them the greatest migrators in history. "There are strong opinions regarding dinosaur migration, but we decided to take a different approach, looking at variables such as energy requirements," said Bell. Their research led them to suggest that migrating dinosaurs could have travelled up to 3,000 kilometres in a round trip-lasting perhaps up to six months-half of the distance suggested previously.

According to Bell, the notion of migrating polar dinosaurs is not new; however, previously-held beliefs were that the animals followed the centrally shifting sunlight, or latitudinal "sun line," as part of their migration and would travel as far as 30 degrees of latitude, or 3,200 kilometres, in order to survive. Given their size and physiology, Bell and Snively have concluded that dinosaurs would have been incapable of sustaining the effort needed to make the trip. "When we looked at the energy requirements needed to support a three-tonne Edmontosaurus over this distance, we found it would have to be as energy efficient as a bird. No land animal travels that far today," said Bell.

Bell does not dispute the evidence of migration and points to discoveries of large bone beds as evidence that many dinosaurs also traveled. In order to sustain the herd, "it seemed to make sense that they would be moving to and from the poles," he said.

While this view of migration is feasible for some species of polar dinosaurs, it does not hold for all, Bell noted. "Many types of dinosaurs were surviving in polar latitudes at the time, and getting along quite fine," said Bell. "They were not physically able to remove themselves from the environment for a variety of reasons and had to adapt to the cold, dark winters just as the rest of us mammals do today."

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by the University of Alberta

Post Comments:

Search

  Archives |  Submit News |  Advertise With Us |  Contact Us |  Links
All contents © 2000 - 2010 Web Doodle, LLC. All rights reserved.