After 90 Years Gathering Dust, B.C. Dinosaur Bones Identified As Belonging To Club-Tailed Species

Monday, September 14, 2020

These fossil were discovered in 1930 but only recently identified as the bones of an ankylosaurian dinosaur — the first ever ankylosaur bones ever found in B.C. (Supplied by Victoria Arbour)

Overlooked fossil bones from Peace River region belong to ankylosaur from 95 million years ago

Bones unearthed 90 years ago in northeastern B.C. have finally been identified as the 95-million-year-old remnants of an ankylosaurian dinosaur — a group of animals known to have tail clubs. 

"It's the first record of dinosaur bones from this particular group of dinosaurs in British Columbia," said Victoria Arbour, who led work to identify the fossils.

Arbour, curator of paleontology at the Royal B.C. Museum, said this also marks the first time dinosaur bones from this era were discovered in B.C. 

The fossils were originally found in 1930 along the Pine River, near Chetwynd, in the province's northeast region. 

Victoria Arbour, a dinosaur expert at the Royal B.C. Museum, digs for fossils along the Pine River in northeastern B.C., where the ankylosaurian fossil bones were found 90 years ago. (Supplied by Victoria Arbour)

The rib and two broken vertebrae come from a stocky, four-legged dinosaur with bony plates and spikes. Some ankylosaurian species are known for the distinct ball of bone at the tip of their tail called a 'tail club,' said Arbour. 

The long-overlooked fossils are currently part of the Canadian Museum of Nature's collection.

"The work of Dr. Arbour and her peers in this paper reminds us of the central role played by museum collections, the source of exciting new discoveries even decades after specimens are acquired," said Jack Lohman, CEO of the Royal B.C. Museum, in a news release.

Ankylosaur footprints preserved in the rock near Flatbed Creek near Tumbler Ridge, B.C. (Pecold/Shutterstock)

So, how did they determine that these fossil bones came from an ankylosaur?

"It all has to do with the rocks that they come from," said Arbour. "This is why when fossils are collected, it's so important to note down where exactly they were found with as much detail as possible."

Ankylosaurian footprints had previously been found in the Peace River region. Arbour hopes this latest revelation means there are more bones to be discovered in the area.

For those interested in learning more about the discovery, Arbour's paper — An ankylosaurian dinosaur from the Cenomanian Dunvegan Formation of northeastern British Columbia, Canada  — can be found here.

The Ziapelta is an example of an ankylosaurian dinosaur with a fully developed tail club. Its fossilized bones have been found in New Mexico in the southern U.S. (Artist: Sydney Mohr)

Source: https://www.cbc.ca/