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Matheronodon is certainly a dinosaur worthy of a bigger bite. With proportionally giant teeth strikingly different from the standard-issue ornithopod dinosaur, it is certainly one of the most important dino discoveries out of Europe this year. Better yet, the original scientific paper by Pascal Godefroit and colleagues is free to read in the journal Scientific Reports! If you’d like to learn more about Rhabdodontidae, the small but successful family of dinosaurs to which Matheronodon belongs, check out the papers in the reference list below.
The original specimen (pictured below) is housed at the Musée du Moulin Seigneurial in Velaux, France. I looked up the museum online, and it looks really cool. Built in an old olive mill, the exhibits include Cretaceous in Provence displays. The displays include specimens of Matheronodon contemporaries, including the sauropod Atsinganosaurus velauciensis, the crocodile Allodaposuchus, and ancient turtles. If I get a chance to visit, I’m hoping the Matheronodon teeth and jaws will be there too!
Our guest this episode was Dr. Ali Nabavizadeh, who was not actually involved in the study. But, he is one of the most knowledgable scientists working on dinosaur jaws! His work focuses on the evolution of eating in herbivorous animals. His early work focused entirely on dinosaurs, but he has branched out into other plant-eating reptiles and mammals. Ali’s work was featured on a classic episode of Past Time on j
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Matheronodon is certainly a dinosaur worthy of a bigger bite. With proportionally giant teeth strikingly different from the standard-issue ornithopod dinosaur, it is certainly one of the most important dino discoveries out of Europe this year. Better yet, the original scientific paper by Pascal Godefroit and colleagues is free to read in the journal Scientific Reports! If you’d like to learn more about Rhabdodontidae, the small but successful family of dinosaurs to which Matheronodon belongs, check out the papers in the reference list below.
The original specimen (pictured below) is housed at the Musée du Moulin Seigneurial in Velaux, France. I looked up the museum online, and it looks really cool. Built in an old olive mill, the exhibits include Cretaceous in Provence displays. The displays include specimens of Matheronodon contemporaries, including the sauropod Atsinganosaurus velauciensis, the crocodile Allodaposuchus, and ancient turtles. If I get a chance to visit, I’m hoping the Matheronodon teeth and jaws will be there too!
Our guest this episode was Dr. Ali Nabavizadeh, who was not actually involved in the study. But, he is one of the most knowledgable scientists working on dinosaur jaws! His work focuses on the evolution of eating in herbivorous animals. His early work focused entirely on dinosaurs, but he has branched out into other plant-eating reptiles and mammals. Ali’s work was featured on a classic episode of Past Time on j