September 20, 2024

Scientists Discover Unique New Species of Dinosaur With a Distinctive “Eyebrow”

Scientists Discover Unique New Species Of Dinosaur With A Distinctive “Eyebrow”Reconstruction of Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus - Scientists Discover Unique New Species Of Dinosaur With A Distinctive “Eyebrow”
Reconstruction of Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus. Credit: Joschua Knüppe

The newly discovered theropod, Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus, bridges a major knowledge gap in Jurassic theropod biogeography and evolution with its unique features and the recovery of both an adult and a juvenile.

Therapods are among the most diverse and important large groups of dinosaurs, including the infamous predators Tyrannosaurus and Allosaurus as well as modern birds. There is a huge variety of known theropods from the Mesozoic Era, the age of the dinosaurs.

Just as lions today are mainly found in Africa and tigers only in Asia, Allosaurus, for example, was widespread in the Jurassic of North America and southwestern Europe, while the similarly sized Metriacanthosaurs lived in China. However, there were previously no large Jurassic predatory dinosaurs known from the massive region between central Europe and East Asia.

Balabansai Formation - Scientists Discover Unique New Species Of Dinosaur With A Distinctive “Eyebrow”Balabansai Formation - Scientists Discover Unique New Species Of Dinosaur With A Distinctive “Eyebrow”
The paleontologists recovered the fossils from the clay, silt, and sandstones of the so-called Balabansai formation, near the town of Tashkumyr in the western part of Kyrgyzstan. Credit: Oliver Wings

Discovering Alpkarakush Kyrgyzicus

Now, researchers have discovered the remains of a new theropod dinosaur in Kyrgyzstan, Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus, marking the first theropod found in the region and filling this knowledge gap. The first remains of the fossil were discovered in 2006 by Kyrgyz paleontologist Aizek Bakirov. The discovery site is located in the mountainous desert regions near the city of Tashkumyr in western Kyrgyzstan. The sediments of the Balabansai Formation exposed here were deposited during the Middle Jurassic period around 165 million years ago.

Skeleton of Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus - Scientists Discover Unique New Species Of Dinosaur With A Distinctive “Eyebrow”Skeleton of Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus - Scientists Discover Unique New Species Of Dinosaur With A Distinctive “Eyebrow”
The anatomically correctly arranged skeletal parts of Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus with excavation participant Alexandra Fernandez as a size comparison. Credit: Oliver Rauhut, SNSB

Excavation Insights and Unique Features

During several excavation campaigns between 2006 and 2023, skull bones, dorsal and pelvic vertebrae, fragments of the shoulder girdle and forelimbs as well as the almost complete pelvic girdle and hind limbs of a predatory dinosaur about eight to nine meters long were recovered. It is a new genus and species with previously unknown characteristics.

Particularly impressive is its extremely protruding “eyebrow” on the so-called postorbital bone, a skull bone behind the eye-opening, which indicates the presence of a horn at this point. Other unique features are found on the dorsal vertebrae and the femur.

Animals of the Balabansai Formation - Scientists Discover Unique New Species Of Dinosaur With A Distinctive “Eyebrow”Animals of the Balabansai Formation - Scientists Discover Unique New Species Of Dinosaur With A Distinctive “Eyebrow”
Animals of the Balabansai Formation, Middle Jurassic, Kyrgyzstan. Credit: Joschua Knüppe

Phylogenetic Importance and Biogeographical Implications

Comparisons with numerous other theropods show that the new species belongs to the metriacanthosaurids, it is closely related to the large predatory dinosaurs of East Asia. Paleontologists suggest the origin of metriacanthosaurids and other important theropod groups in Southeast Asia, from where they spread to other continents via Central Asia and Europe. “Although the affiliation of Alpkarakush with the metriacanthosaurids is not necessarily a surprise, this discovery closes a huge gap in our knowledge of the Jurassic theropods. It leads us to important new insights into the evolution and biogeography of these animals,” says Prof. Oliver Rauhut from the Bavarian Collection of Paleontology and Geology in Munich (SNSB-BSPG) and the first author of the study.

Age and Growth Analysis

The remains of a second, slightly smaller specimen of Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus were also found at the site. Examination of the internal bone structure revealed that the large specimen was an almost adult, at least seventeen years old, and certainly already sexually mature, while the smaller individual is a juvenile. Maybe a parent animal was on tour with its young 165 million years ago.

Metatarsal Bone of Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus - Scientists Discover Unique New Species Of Dinosaur With A Distinctive “Eyebrow”Metatarsal Bone of Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus - Scientists Discover Unique New Species Of Dinosaur With A Distinctive “Eyebrow”
The 165-million-year-old remains, such as this metatarsal bone of Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus, are embedded in the red sedimentary rocks of the Balabansai formation. Credit: Oliver Wings

Technological Advances in Paleontology

Also, digital photogrammetric 3D models of all relevant bones of the Alpkarakush were generated. “These models are now available online and allow researchers worldwide to carry out follow-up studies and make 3D prints,” says co-author Dr. Oliver Wings, Director of the Bamberg Natural History Museum.

Cultural and Scientific Significance

The fossil is named after Alpkarakush, a giant bird in the mythological Kyrgyz “Manas” epic, which often comes to the aid of the heroes in critical moments. The species name “kyrgyzicus” refers directly to the Kyrgyz Republic, the origin of the new predatory dinosaur. Alpkarakush kyrgyzicus could even become the first original dinosaur skeleton ever to be exhibited in Kyrgyzstan: if enough supporters are found, it is planned to present a reconstruction as well as the original bones in the National Historical Museum in Bishkek, pending the acquisition of the necessary funding.

The study is the result of a research cooperation between the M.M. Adyshev Institute of Geology of the National Academy of Sciences of the Kyrgyz Republic and two departments of the Bavarian Natural History Collections (Bavarian Collection of Palaeontology and Geology in Munich and Bamberg Natural History Museum) and the Friedenstein Foundation Gotha. The study, funded by the German Research Foundation, has now been published in the Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.

Reference: “A new theropod dinosaur from the Callovian Balabansai Formation of Kyrgyzstan” by Oliver W M Rauhut, Aizek A Bakirov, Oliver Wings, Alexandra E Fernandes and Tom R Hübner, 20 August 2024, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society.
DOI: 10.1093/zoolinnean/zlae090