Tech Digest
U researcher identifies real Texas dinosaur
ACCORDING TO UNIVERSITY RESEARCHER Peter
Rose, a Ph.D. candidate in geology and geophysics,
the current Texas state dinosaur, Pleurocoelus,
has been misidentified. It turns out the
dinosaur bones found near the Paluxy River in
Glen Rose, Texas, and named the state dinosaur
weren’t Pleurocoelus bones at all, but a whole
new dinosaur.
The discovery came while Rose was working on his master’s degree in Texas. He began scrutinizing
fossils from the Jones Ranch in central
Texas. The fossils were from a sauropod, a huge
plant-eater from millions of years ago. It was longaccepted
that the large bones were Pleurocoelus,
and by 1997 they gained the title of Texas State
Dinosaur.
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| Doctoral candidate Peter Rose discovered dinosaur
bones found in Texas were misidentified. |
Rose determined the fossils were not Pleurocoelus
at all, and did not match any known genus
and species. He named his new find Paluxysaurus
jonesi, in a tribute to the Jones Ranch and its collection
of fossils.
Rose’s discovery is behind a resolution in the
Texas Legislature to change its official state dinosaur
from Pleurocoelus to Paluxysaurus, which
he’s excited about.
“But when you come down to it, whether it’s a
new species is not the big question. More important
are some of the bigger picture ideas about
how these organisms evolved and what they were
doing when they were alive. I hope the future work
I do has some broader implications,” Rose said.
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