Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Thanks to Erin for introducing us to "The Vacuum-Cleaner Dinosaur" ..

Dinosaur found with vacuum-cleaner mouth


WASHINGTON - A dinosaur with a strange jaw designed to hoover-up food grazed in what is now the Sahara Desert 110 million years ago. Remains of the creature that "flabbergasted" paleontologist Paul Sereno went on display Thursday at the headquarters of the National Geographic Society, where they will remain until March.

While Nigersaurus' (Hooversaurus) mouth is shaped like the wide intake slot of a vacuum, it has something lacking in most cleaners — hundreds of tiny, sharp teeth to grind up its food.

The 30-foot-long Nigersaurus had a feather-light skull held close to the ground to graze like an ancient cow. Sereno described it as a younger cousin of the North American dinosaur Diplodicus.

1 comment:

Miguel Garces said...

This gives a new meaning to when Heather vacuums up her food. Cow.