Bones of new dinosaur species discovered in Missouri

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Bones of new dinosaur species discovered in Missouri

A new dinosaur skeleton has been discovered in Missouri at an undisclosed location, experts announced on Tuesday.

Guy Darrough made the discovery at an undisclosed location earlier this year.

The juvenile skeleton of a Parrosaurus Missouriensis was discovered by palaeontologist Guy Darrough in the Show Me State.

The location is being kept secret until it can be secured, according to St. Louis news station KTVI. 

In an interview with the news station, Darrough said he estimated the duckbilled dinosaur measured between 25 and 30 feet in length.

This dinosaur, which has only been found in Missouri before, is considered the state’s official dinosaur, according to Missouri’s state website.

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‘I can’t imagine anything that’s more impressive than what we discovered here. A new genus in species. Its world-famous discovery,’ said Darrough.

juvenile remains of a Parrosaurus Missouriensis
It’s the first time the juvenile remains of a Parrosaurus Missouriensis have ever been discovered.

After discovering the dinosaur skeleton, Darrough had it transported to the Sainte Genevieve Museum Learning Center and subsequently called Chicago’s Field Museum to tell them of the discovery.

‘I eventually talked to Pete Makovicky, curator of dinosaurs at the Field Museum,’ said Darrough. ‘He came down and looked and said, ‘Yeah, you guys got dinosaurs.’

juvenile Parrosaurus Missouriensis bones
The juvenile Parrosaurus Missouriensis bones were deemed a “world-famous discovery.”
 juvenile bones
The juvenile bones were unearthed earlier this year.

After Makovicky and other researchers dug in Missouri, they found an adult Parrosaurus Missouriensis (previously known as Hypsibema missouriensis) right next to it.

‘This is in fact a remarkable site in one of the best dinosaur locals east of the Great Plains,’ Makovicky, a professor at the University of Minnesota, told KTVI.

Sainte Genevieve Museum Learning Center confirmed the news on its Facebook page, adding that ‘Missouri is dinosaur country.’

In a statement given to Newsweek, the Sainte Genevieve Museum Learning Center said they are ‘thrilled’ to help spread the word of the discovery.

The location of the discovery is being kept a secret until the site is secured.

‘While the adult specimen is being transported to the Field Museum in Chicago, the juvenile skeleton will be on display within the laboratory of the Sainte Genevieve Museum Learning Center,’ Abigail Kern, the learning center’s office manager, told the news outlet.

‘We currently have the fossil displayed in the plaster jacket. Starting on the date of our Grand Opening, December 11, we will have paleontologists and preparers actively working on the fossil within the lab, which is viewable in our museum.’ 

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According to the Missouri’s secretary of state website, a set of bones was discovered in the 1940s that belonged to Parrosaurus missouriensis.

All but but one of the bones were sold by Lula Chronister to the Smithsonian Institute for $50, though the twelfth bone has since been reunited with the others.


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