A rare 110 million-year-old “toothless dinosaur” discovered in Australia

Have you ever watched “How to Train Your Dragon”? Well, let’s take a fascinating detour from dragons and delve into the world of a real-life “toothless” dinosaur species that roamed Australia 110 million years ago.

Paleontologists in Australia have unearthed the fossil of a rare and diminutive toothless dinosaur known as Elaphrosaur. This ancient creature, standing at roughly the height of a small emu, measured about 2 meters from head to the tip of its lengthy tail. It sported short arms, each adorned with four fingers.

Dr. Stephen Poropat, a paleontologist from the Swinburne University of Technology, led the team that identified this unique dinosaur. Elaphrosaurs were distinguished by their long beaks, stumpy arms, and diminutive hands, and they likely did not have a taste for meat.

According to a statement from the Swinburne University of Technology, this dinosaur once roamed Australia approximately 110 million years ago. The rare fossil was initially discovered in 2015 by Jessica Parker, a volunteer excavator,

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