Artistic reconstruction of Bolg amondol Cullen Townsend
An extinct monstersaur discovered in North America is shedding new light on life in the area around 75 million years ago.
The creature looks 鈥渓ike a goblin that sprang from the rocks鈥, says at the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles County. The species is a monstersaur 鈥 a member of a group of reptiles that lived during the Late Cretaceous Epoch. It was 鈥減robably 3 or 4 feet, tip to tail鈥, according to Woolley. 鈥淚 think you鈥檇 want to avoid it.鈥
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Woolley named the species Bolg amondol.聽The first part of the name honours a Lord of the Rings character. The second part 鈥 invented from the fictional language Elvish 鈥 is a nod to the dermal armour on its skull, a bony trait shared by its relative, the modern-day Gila monster (Heloderma suspectum).
The uniquely well-preserved fossil was found 20 years ago in Utah by at the Smithsonian Tropical Research Institute, who originally assumed it to be a known prehistoric lizard. He recalls spotting 鈥渁 bunch of scattered bones down a low, flat, sandy area鈥, including parts of the skull, vertebral column, jawbone and hip bone.
Sertich suggested Woolley visit the fossils in a museum in 2022, which led them to the discovery that B. amondol is a type of extinct lizard called a monstersaur. They also found evidence that it could shed its tail when injured, making it the oldest known example of this anti-predator strategy 鈥 which is used by some modern lizards 鈥 in monstersaurs.
Bones belonging to Bolg amondol Natural History Museum of Utah/Bureau of Land Management
Small mammals, frogs, snakes, insects and 鈥渂asically anything that isn鈥檛 a plant鈥 would have been on B. amondol鈥檚 menu, says Woolley, including dinosaur eggs. He says their 鈥渒ind of swampy, pretty hot and humid ecosystem鈥 would have been similar to the modern US Gulf Coast 鈥 unlike Utah鈥檚 desert environment today.
at Midwestern University in Illinois, who was not involved in the work, thinks this is a cautionary tale, pondering the fragility of such 鈥渧ery scary monsters鈥 of the past and present. 鈥淲e also have to appreciate that they’re gone, and they’re gone because their environment changed.鈥
Following B. amondol鈥檚 reveal, Sertich hopes people expand their perception of monstersaurs. 鈥淎ny picture of the primeval tropical forests of North America should include nightmarish, dinosaur-hunting lizards pushing through the undergrowth and climbing through the trees,” he says.
Journal reference:
Royal Society Open Science
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