New Dino Discovered
Date
About
Visit ROM to see a dinosaur discovery, recently named, Wendiceratops pinhornensis.
One of the oldest members of the horned dinosaur family Ceratopsidae, which includes the famous Triceratops, the new dinosaur lived during the Late Cretaceous, 79 million years ago, in what is now the Milk River badlands of southern Alberta. Dinosaurs from this time are poorly understood compared to those from the later rocks of Dinosaur Provincial Park or the Drumheller region.
Horned dinosaur species differ from one another mainly by the arrangement of horns on their faces and neck shields, and in this respect, Wendiceratops was among the most ornamented species in this group. It reached approximately 7 metres in length and 1.5 metres in height, and weighed in at roughly 2,000 kilograms. It lived alongside other ceratopsid species, as well as tyrannosaurids, duckbills, and armored dinosaurs.
The bones of Wendiceratops pinhornensis were discovered by renowned fossil finder Wendy Sloboda in 2010, and excavated over the following three field seasons by ROM’s Dr. David Evans and Dr. Michael Ryan of the Cleveland Museum of Natural History as part of their Southern Alberta Dinosaur Project, which has introduced six new species to Canada’s list of dinosaurs in the last five years.
A special thanks to Lori Taraba of Niagara Falls for helping us to nickname our newest dinosaur, Cornelius!
This discovery was featured on Dino Hunt Canada on History Canada.
Highlights
Interested in reading more about the fantastic new Dino discovery?
NEW RESEARCH: Spectacular New Horned Dinosaur Reveals Evolution of Nose Horns in the TriceratopsFamily
Royal Ontario Museum paleontologist appears in History Channel's Dino Hunt Canada, Inside Toronto
History digs into event TV, Media in Canada
Digging for co-viewers: History preps Dino Hunt Canada, Playback
Partners & Sponsors
Dino Hunt Canada is organized by the Royal Ontario Museum, Shaw Media, Secret Location and Cream Productions.