PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Palaeontology: Prehistoric armoured dinosaur may have been able to dig

2021-03-18
(Press-News.org) Newly excavated skeletal remains of an ankylosaurid -- a large armoured herbivore that lived during the Cretaceous Period -- may indicate that members of this family of dinosaurs were able to dig, according to a study published in Scientific Reports. The specimen, known as MPC-D 100/1359, may further our understanding of ankylosaurid behaviour during the Late Cretaceous (84-72 million years ago).

Yuong-Nam Lee and colleagues excavated the skeletal elements of MPC-D 100/1359 from a deposit of the Baruungoyot Formation in the southern Gobi Desert, Mongolia, where it was discovered in the 1970s. The authors suggest that several anatomical features of MPC-D 100/1359 could indicate that the ankylosaurid was adapted for digging. The bones in its forefeet are arranged in a shallow arc, which could have enabled it to dig soft earth. The fusion of several vertebrae and the decreased number of bones in its hindfeet, compared to other dinosaurs, may have helped anchor MPC-D 100/1359 when digging or moving its tail. The body shape of MPC-D 100/1359, which is wider in the middle and narrower at the front and rear, may have helped its body to remain straight when digging.

The authors speculate that MPC-D 100/1359, may have dug the ground in order to reach water, minerals or roots for food and may even have crouched in shallows pits to protect its soft underside from predators. As similar anatomical features have been reported in other ankylosaurids, the findings suggest that the ability to dig may have been common to other members of this family of dinosaurs as well.

INFORMATION:

Article details

A new ankylosaurid skeleton from the Upper Cretaceous Baruungoyot Formation of Mongolia: its implications for ankylosaurid postcranial evolution

DOI:

10.1038/s41598-021-83568-4

Corresponding Author:

Yuong-Nam Lee
Seoul National University, Seoul, South Korea
Email: ynlee@snu.ac.kr

Please link to the article in online versions of your report (the URL will go live after the embargo ends):

https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-021-83568-4



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

New analysis shows potential for 'solar canals' in California

2021-03-18
UC Santa Cruz researchers published a new study--in collaboration with UC Water and the Sierra Nevada Research Institute at UC Merced--that suggests covering California's 6,350 km network of public water delivery canals with solar panels could be an economically feasible means of advancing both renewable energy and water conservation. The concept of "solar canals" has been gaining momentum around the world as climate change increases the risk of drought in many regions. Solar panels can shade canals to help prevent water loss through evaporation, and some types of solar panels also work better over canals, because the cooler environment keeps them from overheating. ...

Artificial neuron device could shrink energy use and size of neural network hardware

Artificial neuron device could shrink energy use and size of neural network hardware
2021-03-18
Training neural networks to perform tasks, such as recognizing images or navigating self-driving cars, could one day require less computing power and hardware thanks to a new artificial neuron device developed by researchers at the University of California San Diego. The device can run neural network computations using 100 to 1000 times less energy and area than existing CMOS-based hardware. Researchers report their work in a paper published Mar. 18 in Nature Nanotechnology. Neural networks are a series of connected layers of artificial neurons, where the output of one layer provides the ...

System detects errors when medication is self-administered

2021-03-18
From swallowing pills to injecting insulin, patients frequently administer their own medication. But they don't always get it right. Improper adherence to doctors' orders is commonplace, accounting for thousands of deaths and billions of dollars in medical costs annually. MIT researchers have developed a system to reduce those numbers for some types of medications. The new technology pairs wireless sensing with artificial intelligence to determine when a patient is using an insulin pen or inhaler, and flags potential errors in the patient's administration method. "Some past work reports that up to 70% of patients do not ...

Researchers identify a way to reverse high blood sugar and muscle loss

2021-03-18
A study by Monash University has uncovered that liver metabolism is disrupted in people with obesity-related type 2 diabetes, which contributes to high blood sugar and muscle loss - also known as skeletal muscle atrophy. Using human trials as well as mouse models, collaborative research led by Dr Adam Rose at Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute has found the liver metabolism of the amino acid alanine is altered in people with obesity-related type 2 diabetes. By selectively silencing enzymes that break down alanine in liver cells, high blood sugar and muscle loss can be reversed by the restoration of skeletal muscle protein synthesis, a critical determinant of muscle size and strength. The research, published today in Nature Metabolism, has shown the altered liver metabolism ...

Scientists see cross-group adoption of young bonobo apes in the wild for the first time

2021-03-18
Scientists have witnessed bonobo apes adopting infants who were born outside of their social group for the first time in the wild. Researchers, including psychologists at Durham University, UK, twice saw the unusual occurrence among bonobos in the Democratic Republic of Congo, in central Africa. They say their findings give us greater insight into the parental instincts of one of humans' closest relatives and could help to explain the emotional reason behind why people readily adopt children who they have had no previous connection with. The research, led by Kyoto University, in Japan, is published in the journal Scientific Reports. Researchers observed a number of bonobo groups over several years in the Wamba area of ...

Study of 630,000 patients unveils COVID-19 outcome disparities across racial/ethnic lines

2021-03-18
Researchers at Seattle's Institute for Systems Biology and their collaborators looked at the electronic health records of nearly 630,000 patients who were tested for SARS-CoV-2, and found stark disparities in COVID-19 outcomes -- odds of infection, hospitalization, and in-hospital mortality -- between White and non-White minority racial and ethnic groups. The work was published in the journal Clinical Infectious Diseases. The team looked at sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of patients who were part of the Providence healthcare system in Washington, Oregon and California. These ...

HIV: An antidiabetic drug to reduce chronic inflammation

2021-03-18
Metformin, a drug used to treat type-2 diabetes, could help reduce chronic inflammation in people living with HIV (PLWH) who are being treated with antiretroviral therapy (ART), according to researchers at the University of Montreal Hospital Research Centre (CRCHUM). Although ART has helped improved the health of PLWH, they are nevertheless at greater risk of developing complications related to chronic inflammation, such as cardiovascular disease. These health problems are mainly due to the persistence of HIV reservoirs in the patients' long-lived memory T cells and to the constant activation of their immune system. In a pilot study published recently in ...

New method targets disease-causing proteins for destruction

2021-03-18
MADISON, Wis. -- Scientists at the University of Wisconsin-Madison have developed a way to use a cell's own recycling machinery to destroy disease-causing proteins, a technology that could produce entirely new kinds of drugs. Some cancers, for instance, are associated with abnormal proteins or an excess of normally harmless proteins. By eliminating them, researchers believe they can treat the underlying cause of disease and restore a healthy balance in cells. The new technique builds on an earlier strategy by researchers and pharmaceutical companies to remove proteins residing inside of a cell, and expands on this system to include proteins ...

Scientists document first biofluorescent fish in the Arctic

Scientists document first biofluorescent fish in the Arctic
2021-03-18
For the first time, scientists have documented biofluorescence in an Arctic fish species. The study, led by researchers at the American Museum of Natural History who spent hours in the icy waters off of Greenland where the red-and-green-glowing snailfish was found, is published today in the American Museum Novitates. "Overall, we found marine fluorescence to be quite rare in the Arctic, in both invertebrate and vertebrate lineages," said John Sparks, a curator in the American Museum of Natural History's Department of Ichthyology and one of the authors of the ...

For college students with disabilities, communication is key in online learning

2021-03-18
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic changed the higher education experience for students across the United States, with more than 90 percent of institutions reporting a shift in education delivery with the arrival of COVID-19. The rapid transition to remote study came with its own learning curve for students and faculty alike. But for many students with disabilities, the shift offered new educational modalities as well as challenges - and the hope that some changes will continue after the threat of the virus subsides. "This was a really unique, historical moment," says Nicholas Gelbar '06 (ED), '07 MEd, '13 Ph.D., an associate research professor with the Neag School of Education. "Remote learning, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Prenatal exposure to air pollution is associated with lower cognitive performance in early childhood

AI learns better when it talks to itself

96% accurate footprint tracker for tiny mammals could help reveal ecosystem health

Balancing comfort and sustainability with climate-tailored housing

Not just sweet: the sugar branches that shape the brain

Spectral slimming for single-nanoparticle plasmons

Exploring the scientific connotation of the medicinal properties of toad venom (Chansu) — 'dispersing fire stagnation and opening orifices to awaken the spirit' — from the microscopic world of 5-HTR d

How early-career English language teachers can grow professionally, despite all odds

Achieving Ah‑level Zn–MnO2 pouch cells via interfacial solvation structure engineering

Rational electrolyte structure engineering for highly reversible zinc metal anode in aqueous batteries

Common environmental chemical found to disrupt hormones and implantation

Nitrate in drinking water linked to increased dementia risk while nitrate from vegetables is linked to a lower risk, researchers find  

Smoke from wildfires linked to 17,000 strokes in the US alone

Air frying fatty food better for air quality than alternatives – if you clean it, study says

Most common methods of inducing labour similarly effective

Global health impacts of plastics systems could double by 2040

Low-cost system turns smartphones into emergency radiation detectors

Menopause linked to loss of grey matter in the brain, poorer mental health and sleep disturbance

New expert guidelines standardize diagnosis and monitoring of canine dementia

Study links salty drinking water to higher blood pressure, especially in coastal areas

Study reveals struggles precede psychosis risk by years, suggesting prevention opportunities

Nearly half of CDC surveillance databases have halted updates, raising concerns about health data gaps

Study compares ways to support opioid deprescribing in primary care

Primary care home visits for older adults declined after payment policy changes and COVID-19 in Ontario, Canada

Linking financial incentives to improved blood sugar levels may support type 2 diabetes management

Care continuity linked to fewer hospital visits for older adults receiving home-based care

Produce prescriptions improve nutrition for medicaid patients with diabetes

CRISP translation guide enables translating research-reporting guidelines across languages

How patients value visit type, speed of care, and continuity in primary care

Systems-level approach in primary care improves alcohol screening, counseling, and pregnancy-intention records

[Press-News.org] Palaeontology: Prehistoric armoured dinosaur may have been able to dig