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Science
Related: About this forumNew Jurassic dinosaur species identified in Thailand
New Jurassic dinosaur species identified in Thailand from a single bone
Life reconstruction of a herd of five individuals of Uragasaurus kalasinensis inhabiting a Late Jurassic forest in Thailand, accompanied by a pair of rhamphorhynchoid pterosaurs and a metriacanthosaurid theropod. Artwork by Pakorn Chotchaiyaporn (Jæsica ẞababi). Credit: Scientific Reports (2026). DOI: 10.1038/s41598-026-49822-3
A new study published in Scientific Reports describes the identification of a new species of long-necked dinosaur found in the Phu Kradung Formation in Thailand. The team calls the dinosaur Uragasaurus kalasinensis and says it is the first formally named mamenchisaurid dinosaur from Thailand.
Mamenchisaurids were long-necked sauropod dinosaurs that dominated parts of East Asia during the Middle to Late Jurassic period. Most previously named mamenchisaurid species have come from China, mostly from Sichuan and Xinjiang, but the group's diversity and range outside China have been unclear. There have been some hints that mamenchisaurids existed in Southeast Asia, but only a few diagnostic fossils have been found, and no Thai species had been formally named.
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Only fragmentary possible mamenchisaurid remains had previously been found in Thailand, but the recent finding yielded a more informative fossil in the form of a well-preserved front dorsal vertebraa part of the dinosaur's spine. The vertebra has a distinctive Y-shaped arrangement of supporting bony ridges, called laminae, which the researchers say is unique among known mamenchisaurids.
-snip-
Aside from adding a new mamenchisaurid species, the discovery also helps paleontologists piece together details surrounding the evolutionary history of mamenchisaurids and where they spread across the continent. It also provides more information about the Phu Kradung Formation. There has been some debate about which time periods the formation spans, and the new find helps place the lower part of the formation more firmly in the Upper Jurassic age.
Much more on the link ...
https://phys.org/news/2026-07-jurassic-dinosaur-species-thailand-bone.html
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New Jurassic dinosaur species identified in Thailand (Original Post)
KelleyKramer
Yesterday
OP
I wish they'd go back to illustrating dinosaurs in grayscale. Artists have long jumped the shark on colorful dinos.
eppur_se_muova
16 hrs ago
#1
A--B (parrots are a type of dinosaur) does not equate B--A (dinosaurs are a type of parrot).
eppur_se_muova
4 hrs ago
#3
eppur_se_muova
(43,011 posts)1. I wish they'd go back to illustrating dinosaurs in grayscale. Artists have long jumped the shark on colorful dinos.
OK, there's actual evidence for pigmentation in some rare cases, but dinos weren't parrots. Exercise some self-restraint, guys.
KelleyKramer
(11,722 posts)2. Actually, parrots ARE dinosaurs
Like most modern birds today, parrots are direct descendants of dinosaurs. They belong to the group of avian theropod dinosaurs.
Parrots are also distant relatives of large theropods like T. rex, sharing a common ancestor millions of years ago.
And we do have some evidence of colors on large dinosaurs, but it is hard to find because it is very rare for skin and/or tissue to fossilize and last over 60 million years.
eppur_se_muova
(43,011 posts)3. A--B (parrots are a type of dinosaur) does not equate B--A (dinosaurs are a type of parrot).
We're all descendants of some single-celled ancestor, but we don't much resemble it.
Response to eppur_se_muova (Reply #3)
KelleyKramer This message was self-deleted by its author.