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Nyasasaurus
Nyasasaurus
An artist's illustration of Nyasasaurus parringtoni
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Chordata
Class: Sauropsida
clade: Dinosauriformes
Genus: Nyasasaurus
Nesbitt et al., 2013
Type species
Nyasasaurus parringtoni
Nesbitt et al., 2013
Synonyms

Nyasasaurus parringtoni (nye-AS-suh-SORE-us) was possibly the earliest-known dinosaur, living about 243 million years ago during the Mid-Triassic in what is now Tanzania. It grew to be about 10 feet (3 meters) long, and was a very early prosauropod.

Discovery[]

Nyasasaurus was originally discovered in the 1930's, but wasn't officially named or described as its own species until December 2012.

Nyasa Bone Frags

Nyasasaurus Bone Fragments

It was kept in an English museum collecting dust for over 50 years until some scientists started looking through the museum dinosaur-bone storage area and rediscovered this important find. It was unearthed in Tanzania, Africa by Francis Rex Parrington sometime around 1930, and for many years was kept hidden and nearly unknown. It was first described by a paleontologist named Alan J. Charig in 1956, but it was never truly published and wasn't fully described until 2012. It was first found in fossil beds near Lake Nyasa in soil layers that suggested it came from the Mid-Triassic about 243 million years ago.

Description[]

Nyasasaurus was an early dinosauriform that grew to be about 10 feet long, 3 feet (1 meter) tall at the hip, weigh and approximately 135 pounds.

NyasasaurusThumbnail

Nyasasaurus Feeding In Front of Two Hyperodapedon

Relatively unknown or found is of Nyasasaurus, but we can tell what it may have looked like based on well-known relatives like Plateosaurus. It had a long, extending neck (a feature that would eventually lead to the mega-sauropods that we all know of) with a small head that allowed it to reach higher into trees to get food than before. It could possibly have been both a biped and an quadruped, with sharp claws on each toe for defense. It also had a long tail that stretched over half its body-length that would've been helpful in balancing.

W460

Nyasasaurus Skeleton

Nyasasaurus is possibly currently the oldest-known dinosaur yet found, being 243 million years old, nearly 15 million years older than the previously oldest-known dinosaurs, such as Herrerasaurus, Panphagia, Coelophysis, or Eoraptor. This has shed new light on dinosaur evolution, like how we now know that dinosaurs first evolved from archosaurian reptiles during the Mid-Triassic and not the Late Triassic like we used to believe, and that dinosaurs evolved from relatively small creatures before evolving from into the mega-beasts everyone now recognizes.

World's_Oldest_Known_Dinosaur_Identified

World's Oldest Known Dinosaur Identified

A another middle triassic animal Spondylosoma was unknown for it to be a dinosaur.

Gallery[]

References[]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nyasasaurus_parringtoni

http://news.discovery.com/animals/oldest-dinosaur-found-121204.html#mkcpgn=rssnws1

http://www.science20.com/news_articles/nyasasaurus_parringtoni_oldest_dinosaur_found_so_far-98092

http://www.slate.com/blogs/trending/2012/12/05/oldest_dinosaur_nyasasaurus_parringtoni_lived_240_million_years_ago.html

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