New species of dinosaur unearthed by Isle of Wight fossil hunters

Anthony Hutchings IOW dinosaur speciesAnthony Hutchings
The new discoveries have been named Ceratosuchops inferodios (foreground) and Riparvenator milnerae

The discovery of two new species of dinosaur, which likely roamed the south of England 125 million years ago, has shed new light on the predators.

Palaeontologists have described one of the carnivorous reptiles as a "hell heron", comparing its hunting style to a fearsome version of the bird.

The remains of the three-toed dinosaurs were found on an Isle of Wight beach.

They belonged to the spinosaurid group and are thought to have been 9m (29ft) in length with 1m-long (3ft) skulls.

The collection of about 50 bones took several years to unearth.

Chris Barker Braincase from Riparovenator milneraeChris Barker
Riparovenator milnerae is thought to have had a 1m-long skull similar to crocodiles

The first specimen - named Ceratosuchops inferodios - has been labelled a "horned crocodile-faced hell heron".

With low horns and bumps around the brow region, the name also refers to the predator's heron-like hunting style.

The second has been called Riparovenator milnerae, which translates as "Milner's riverbank hunter", in honour of British palaeontologist Angela Milner, who died recently.

Fossil collectors initially found parts of two skulls before a team from the island's Dinosaur Isle Museum uncovered a large section of a tail.

It comes after the last spinosaurid skeleton, which belonged to Baryonyx, was discovered in a quarry in Surrey in 1983. Only single bones and isolated teeth had been found since.

Chris Barker Chilton Chine beachChris Barker
The haul of bones was discovered on a beach near Brighstone, Isle of Wight, over a period of several years

PhD student Chris Barker, author of the University of Southampton study, said: "We found the skulls to differ not only from Baryonyx, but also from one another, suggesting the UK housed a greater diversity of spinosaurids than previously thought."

Co-author Darren Naish, an expert in British theropod dinosaurs, said: "We've known for a couple of decades now that Baryonyx-like dinosaurs awaited discovery on the Isle of Wight, but finding the remains of two such animals in close succession was a huge surprise."

The study also suggested how spinosaurids might have first evolved in Europe, before dispersing into Asia, Africa and South America.

The collection of about 50 bones will go on display at the Dinosaur Isle Museum in Sandown.

Curator Dr Martin Munt said the finds cemented the Isle of Wight's status as one of the top locations for dinosaur remains in Europe.

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