India's very own dinosaur Rajasaurus Narmadensis
Wednesday, August 13 2003 20:53 Hrs (IST)
Mumbai: 'Rajasaurus Narmadensis', a new species of dinosaur has been identified by a Chicago-based
Palaeontologist, Paul Sereno, based on the bones collected from Central and Western parts of India.
Paul, along with his team has also for the first time reconstructed the dinosaur skull, based on the bones
collected by Indian palaeontologists over the past several years.
Disclosing the find at a media conference on August 13, Paul, a National Geographic explorer, said the
new species was a unique dinosaur found only in India so far.
"The new specie named Rajasaurus appears to be a stocky dinosaur with an unusual head crest. From
the heavy weight of the hip bone we have concluded that the dinosaur was probably a heavy-meat-
eating carnivorous animal," said Paul.
The 30-feet-long dinosaur with its unusually long horn and a strong exterior face suggests that it used
its head to pound its prey and eat it. However, its teeth, ironically are much smaller than the those found
in other dinosaurs.
Believed to be 67-million year old, the Rajasaurus perhaps appeared towards the extreme end of the
era of dinosaurs and would have moved through the entire Narmada valley, before the emergence of
the Himalayas on the Indian subcontinent, he said.
"We decided to name the animal Rajasaurus Narmadensis, which means regal reptile from Narmada,
since the bones were found near the Narmada River in Western India," he explains.
Rajasaurus appears to be related to species found in Africa, Madagascar and South America.
Recounting the background of the historical find, Paul said that he along with his team had arrived in
India in January 2001 to study the fossil bones of dinosaurs found from a pit of a skeletal debris found at
a regional geological survey in Jaipur in 1980s.
"After a detailed study of a map prepared of the Jaipur fossil, we also spent nearly two months in Raoli
village in Gujarat trying to trace some more fossil bones. Our search yielded some results. We were able
to find the central part of the skull, left and right hip bones and a sacrum during our two month stay," he
said.
A vexing problem, was the presence of bones of both the meat-eating dinosaur (theropods) and plant-
eating dinosaur (sauropods). "The presence of bones of both kinds makes it difficult to reconstruct an
animal. However, it was a detailed map drawn by Indian palaeontologist Srivastava in 1983, documenting
the position of each fossil bone as it lay in the rock that was the key to reconstructing the skull."
"We got a marker and began colouring each bone on the map. As we sat there all dirty on the floor, we
suddenly realized that a partial skeleton of a meat-eater lay there. We could see one individual
dinosaur," he said.
With the help of the bones from Jaipur, the bones found by Paul's team and earlier bones found in
Jabalpur the team was able to reconstruct the skull, he said.
"The discovery, which will be put for examination for global experts, was important since it would help in
adding to the current knowledge of dinosaur belonging to the family of Abelisaur predators and adding a
new angle to dinosaur in the Indian subcontinent," he said.
PTI
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