| Liaosaurus: a ‘missing link’ of the horned dinos? |
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Liaosaurus: a ‘missing link’ of the horned dinos?28 March 2002 A team of American and Chinese paleontologists have discovered two small dinosaur skulls in China. This prompted headlines such as ‘Dino discovery fills in missing link’ because they were perceived as ‘Triceratops’ Tiny Ancestors’. The researchers published their findings in Nature 416(6878):314–317, 21 March 2002. The researchers found two skulls which they named Liaoceratops yanzigouensis, after the Laioning province and Yanzigou village, while ‘–ceratops’ is the usual ending for horned dinosaur names, from Greek keras, kerat– horn and opsis face. They dated the finds at 128–139 Ma (millions of years) or possibly 145 Ma. The spokesman was Peter Makovicky, assistant curator of dinosaurs at Chicago’s Field Museum. Other team members include Mark Norell, an ardent advocate of the dino-to-bird theory who has discovered many alleged feathered dinosaurs such as Protarchaeopteryx and Caudipteryx and BPM 1 3-13; and Xu Xing, who helped expose the Archaeoraptor hoax. The holotype, the single specimen selected by a discoverer to be the definitive example of a new species, was a skull 4.4 inches (11.1 centimetres) long. The animal was estimated to be about 3 feet (1 metre) long—about the size of a large hare. The other skull was only about half the size, and was considered a juvenile skull. The skull had a frill, which may have been for display but also functioned as an attachment for its powerful jaw muscles. Liaoceratops had a small horn facing sideways under each of its eyes, which the researchers claim wouldn’t have been much use in defence, so it supposedly had evolved for display. Many evolutionists believe that the bipedal 2-metre-long Psittacosaurus (‘parrot lizard’, ‘dated’ 119–97.5 Ma) was an ancestor to the ceratopsians, or ‘horned dinosaurs’ (e.g. see psittacosaurids). But according to this paper, basal ceratopsians, of which Liaoceratops is claimed to be the most primitive, branched into the psittacosaurids and neoceratopsians, and much earlier than previously thought. The latter branch includes the elephant-sized Triceratops, the largest, commonest and most famous ceratopsian, and supposedly one of the last dinosaurs to become extinct. Was it really a missing link?As usual, although the mass media used such terms, the original paper, while pro-evolution, was not so forward. For example:
For more information about dinosaurs, see Q&A: Dinosaurs, and also see Q&A: Radiometric Dating. (Article available in Spanish) |

