TEXT B Once found almost entirely
in the western United States and in Asia, dinosaur fossils are now being
discovered on all seven continents. A host of new revelations emerged in 1998
that promixse to reshape scientists’views of dinosaurs, including what they
looked like and when and where they lived. It is doubtful that
Tyrannosaurus Re had lips or that Triceratops had cheeks, says Lawrence Witmer,
an assistant professor of anatomy at Ohio University in Athens, Ohio. Witmer was
a leading researcher for a study on dinosaur anatomy that was presented at the
annual meeting of the Society for Vertebrate Paleontology, which concluded on
October 3 in Snowbird, Utah. Witmer’s study reached its
conclusions by using high - tech computerized aial tomography (CT or CAT) scans
along with comparative anatomy studies. For eample, the theory that Triceratops
and similar dinosaur species had cheeks was based on past comparisons with
mammals such as sheep. But Witmer’s careful analysis found the structure of the
triceratops jaw and skull made it more likely that Triceratops had a beak like
that of an eagle. Witmer said that scientists should use birds and crocodiles as
models when researching the appearance of dinosaurs. In early
October scientists announced that they had confirmed the discovery of a new type
of ceratopsian dinosaur. The dinosaur’s bones, found in New Meixco in 1996, are
forcing paleontologists to rethink their theories about when ceratopsians
migrated to what is now North America. Scientists previously
thought that ceratopsians, the group that included the well - known Triceratops,
arrived in North America from Asia between 70 million and 80 million years ago.
During this time, the late Cretaceous Period, the earth’s two supercontinents
--Laarasia in the north and Gondwanaland in the south — were in the process of
pulling apart, cutting dinosaur populations off from each other and interrupting
migratory patterns. The fossilized bones, found by eight - year
- old Christopher Wolfe and his father, paleontologist Doug Wolfe of the Mesa
Southwest Museum in Arizona, date to about 90 million years ago. This could mean
that ceratopsians originated in North America and migrated to Asia rather than
the reverse, paleontologists said. Doug Wolfe named the important new species of
dinosaur Zuniceratops christopheri after his son. An expedition
from the Universities of Alaska in Anchorage and Fairbanks has discovered a
region in remote northern Alaska so rich in fossilized dinosaur tracks that team
members dubbed it the " dino expressway ". The trampled area was found during
the summer of 1998 on Alaska’s North Slope near the Brooks Range.
The team found 13 new track sites and made casts from the prints of five
different types of dinosaurs. The rock in which the prints were found dates to
more than 100 million years ago, or about 25 million years older than the
previously discovered signs of dinosaurs in the Arctic region. Paleontologists
said that the new findings provide important evidence that dinosaurs migrated
between Asia and North America during the early and mid -Cretaceous Period,
before Asia split off into its own continent. Two rich fossil
sites in the hills of Bolivia have been recently discovered, exciting
paleontologists and dinosaur buffs. This discovery includes one of the most
spectacular dinosaur trackways ever found. The discovery of a
large site in the mountain region of Kila Kila in southern Bolivia was announced
in early October. Here scientists found the tracks of at least two unknown
species of dinosaur. These included a large quadruped (four-footed) dinosaur
that was probably about 20 m (about 70 ft) long. The other site,
located not far from the Bolivian city of Sucre, was uncovered in a cement
quarry by workers several years ago but was not brought to
paleontologists’attention until the middle of 1998. The site features a vertical
wall covered with thousands of dinosaur prints representing more than 100
different species. The tracks date back to between 65 million and 70 million
years ago. Since dinosaurs arc believed to have died out around 65 million years
ago, the prints were likely made by some of the last dinosaurs on
earth. Scientists speculated that the tracks were made at the
edge of a lake or swamp and were then hardened and preserved. The rock
containing the tracks was then pushed into a vertical position over millions of
years of geologic activity. Dinosaur eggs have also been found at the site,
which paleontologists are working to preserve before it falls victim to erosion.
Paleontologists hope to study the site and learn about the diet and physical
characteristics of the dinosaurs that are represented there. Witmer’s research leads people to believe ______.
A.Tyrannosaurus Re had lips and Triceratops had cheeks. B.dinosaurs might have looked like mammals such as sheep. C.dinosaurs might not bare looked like what we thought. D.dinosaurs must have looked like birds or crocodiles.