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The remains are from Majungatholus atopus, a meat-eating, two-legged dinosaur that measured more than 9 metres from nose to tail. Ray Rogers from Macalester College in St Paul, Minnesota, and his colleagues analysed more than 20 gnarled bones, from two different individuals, found in an ancient riverbed. "Never have I seen material so chewed on," says Rogers. The tooth marks on the bones perfectly match the teeth in a Majungatholus skull found in the same area, reports the team. The bones have been mauled, much as coyote might chew a cow, explains Rogers. There are parallel sets of tooth marks, centimetres apart, across the ribs and backbones. The spacing and shape of the imprints do not match the dental profile of other animals that are known to have been alive at the time. "This was the smoking gun," says Rogers, proving that this breed of dinosaur was a cannibal. "It gives us a wonderful view into the late-Cretaceous world of this animal."
Majungatholus did not dine exclusively on its own kind. Similar markings on a pelvic bone from a huge sauropod - a long-necked, pea-headed herbivore - suggest that the beast also ate other dinosaurs. The relics were discovered by palaeontologists working on the Mahajanga Basin Project, a ten-year excavation of northwest Madagascar's spectacular bone beds. The bones were found in two mass animal graveyards, along with the remains of other dinosaurs, crocodilians, turtles, fish, frogs and birds.
Cannabilism is still practised by several species today, including lions, komodo dragons, crocodiles and grasshopper mice. In contrast, evidence of cannibalism among dinosaurs is sparse. Source: Nature News Service
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