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Triceratops became extinct about 66 million years ago. Photo: AFP

Triceratops ancestor a turkey-sized plant eater that roamed in herds

The forerunner of dinosaurs like three-horned triceratops was a bird-hipped creature the size of a turkey that lived in herds in South America and liked to munch on ferns.

AFP

The forerunner of dinosaurs like three-horned triceratops was a bird-hipped creature the size of a turkey that lived in herds in South America and liked to munch on ferns.

, named after the country in which it was discovered, lived 201 million years ago in the earliest Jurassic period, soon after a major extinction at the end of the Triassic, said a paper in the journal .

The early history of bird-hipped, beaked, plant-eating dinosaurs called Ornithischia, of which the newly discovered lizard is a very old example, has thus far been sketchy, as so few have been found.

Ornithischia gave rise to famous beasts such as iguanodon, stegosaurus and triceratops, which have inspired children's toys and cartoons.

The discovery of the remains of at least four Laquintasaura in Venezuela showed that dinosaurs bounced back quickly after the Triassic species wipeout, said study author Paul Barrett, a palaeontologist at the Natural History Museum in London.

"It is fascinating and unexpected to see they lived in herds, something we have little evidence of so far in dinosaurs from this time," he said.

"The fact that it is from a completely new and early taxon means we can fill in some of the gaps in our understanding of when different groups of dinosaurs evolved."

The remains were found in the La Quinta geological formation in the Venezuelan Andes, an area previously thought to have been far too inhospitable for dinosaurs. The fossilised evidence revealed that Laquintasaura walked on two hind legs and was about a metre long with its tail, and about a quarter that wide at the hips.

It is thought to have been largely a plant-eater, favouring ferns, but curved tips on some teeth suggest it may have also eaten insects and other small prey.

This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Triceratops ancestor a turkey-sized plant eater
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