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Plateosaurus: Scientists discover quirk in dinosaur babies

Rebecca Staudenmaier
November 8, 2020

A young Plateosaurus skeleton dubbed "Fabian" is helping to shed light on what the long-necked plant-eaters looked like. In an "astonishing" discovery, researchers found they differed from other dinosaur toddlers.

The skeleton of a juvenile Plateosaurus dubbed "Fabian" on display
Image: Sauriermuseum Frick/dpa/picture alliance

While many dinosaur babies looked wildly different from their parents, German researchers have discovered that some species actually looked like scaled-down copies of the adults.

Paleontologists at the University of Bonn made the discovery while examining the skeleton of a young Plateosaurus. The nearly-complete skeleton, dubbed "Fabian," was found in 2015 in Switzerland (pictured above).

Researchers "surprisingly" discovered that the young specimen's physical characteristics and body proportions were "remarkably consistent" with adult Plateosaurus, according to the study in the journal Acta Palaeontologica Polonica.

"The fact that the Plateosaurus juvenile already looked so similar to the adults is all the more astonishing because they were ten times heavier," Jens Lallensack, a paleontologist who took part in the study, told news agency DPA.

Read more: Fossils show feathered dinosaurs had a lousy life

The long-necked Plateosaurus could grow to weigh up to 4,000 kilogramsImage: Klaus-Dietmar Gabbert/dpa/picture alliance

Other dinosaur babies, on the other hand, looked wildly different from their full-grown adult versions.

Researchers have found that young Mussaurus hatchlings, which are related to the Plateosaurus, emerged walking on four legs — although adults moved around only on two, DPA reported.

From mini to massive

The research team determined that "Fabian" was 2.3 meters long (7.5 feet long) and weighed between 40 and 60 kilograms (88 to 132 pounds).

By comparing "Fabian" to the fossils of adults, they found numerous anatomical similarities, with only a few exceptions.

Read more: Fossil discovery points to 'origin of modern world' after dinosaur extinction

A dinosaur on the move

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"The hand and neck of the juveniles are perhaps a little longer — the arm bones somewhat shorter and slimmer," Darius Nau, a researcher at the University of Bonn's Institute of Geoscience, told DPA.

The plant-eating, long-necked Plateosaurus lived around 220 million years ago in northern and central Europe and Greenland. Adults grew to be between 4.8 to 10 meters long and weighed up to 4,000 kilograms.

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