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Relict duck-billed dinosaurs survived into the last age of the dinosaurs in subantarctic Chile

Jhonatan Alarcón-Muñoz, Alexander O. Vargas, Hans P. Püschel, Sergio Soto‐Acuña, Leslie M.E. Manríquez, Marcelo Leppe, Jonatan Kaluza, Verónica Milla, Carolina S. Gutstein, José Palma-Liberona, Wolfgang Stinnesbeck, Eberhard Frey, Juan Pablo Pino, Dániel Bajor, Elaine Núñez, Héctor Ortíz, David Rubilar-Rogers, Penélope Cruzado‐Caballero

2023Science Advances19 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In the dusk of the Mesozoic, advanced duck-billed dinosaurs (Hadrosauridae) were so successful that they likely outcompeted other herbivores, contributing to declines in dinosaur diversity. From Laurasia, hadrosaurids dispersed widely, colonizing Africa, South America, and, allegedly, Antarctica. Here, we present the first species of a duck-billed dinosaur from a subantarctic region, Gonkoken nanoi , of early Maastrichtian age in Magallanes, Chile. Unlike duckbills further north in Patagonia, Gonkoken descends from North American forms diverging shortly before the origin of Hadrosauridae. However, at the time, non-hadrosaurids in North America had become replaced by hadrosaurids. We propose that the ancestors of Gonkoken arrived earlier in South America and reached further south, into regions where hadrosaurids never arrived: All alleged subantarctic and Antarctic remains of hadrosaurids could belong to non-hadrosaurid duckbills like Gonkoken . Dinosaur faunas of the world underwent qualitatively different changes before the Cretaceous-Paleogene asteroid impact, which should be considered when discussing their possible vulnerability.

Topics & Concepts

BiologyEvolutionary biologyZoologyPaleontologyPaleontology and Evolutionary BiologyEvolution and Paleontology StudiesIchthyology and Marine Biology
Relict duck-billed dinosaurs survived into the last age of the dinosaurs in subantarctic Chile | Litcius