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Scientists Find Fish-Eating Dinosaur With Unicorn Spike

Scientists Find Fish-Eating Dinosaur With Unicorn Spike

Scientists discovered a new Spinosaurus species in the Sahara Desert with a massive spike on its head and jaws built for catching fish. The dinosaur lived 100 million years ago and looked completely different from the giant meat-eaters we usually think of.

This find is exciting because it shows dinosaurs were way more diverse than we imagined. While T-Rex was crushing bones on land, this guy was basically a 50-foot-long crocodile with a unicorn horn, swimming around ancient rivers.

Swimming Giants With Spikes

The Spinosaurus had paddle-like feet, dense bones for diving, and a sail-like fin on its back. But this new species adds something wild – a horn-like spike jutting from its skull. Its long, narrow snout was packed with cone-shaped teeth perfect for grabbing slippery fish.

Researchers found the fossils in Morocco’s Kem Kem rock formations, famous for preserving ancient river creatures. The spike probably helped the dinosaur navigate underwater or attract mates, though scientists are still debating its exact purpose.

The discovery reshapes how we picture prehistoric Africa. Instead of dry land filled with typical predators, it was a lush waterworld where dinosaurs evolved into semi-aquatic hunters.

What’s Next

Paleontologists expect to find more aquatic dinosaur species as they explore similar rock formations across North Africa. Each discovery reveals how creative evolution gets when animals adapt to water.

Originally reported by
Ars Technica
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