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October 1, 2020

Juvenile dromaeosaurids 70 million years ago in Alaska

Juvenile dromaeosaurids on the Prince Creek Formation in northern Alaska 70 million years ago. A group of predatory dinosaurs closely related to birds, Dromaeosaurids were thought to be migratory, but the discovery of a lower jaw bone of a juvenile dromaeosaurid on the North Slope of Alaska supports a growing theory that some Cretaceous Arctic dinosaurs did not migrate with the seasons but were year-round residents.

[Research supported by U.S. National Science Foundation grants OPP 0424594 and OPP 0425636.]

Learn more about this research in the Southern Methodist University news story Alaskan discovery of jaw bone from tiny, juvenile predator changes assumptions about dinosaur migration; or view the researcher's Project Log. (Date image taken: Specimen collected in 2007; analysis done in 2019; artwork created in 2020; date originally posted to NSF Multimedia Gallery: Oct. 1, 2020)

Credit: Rendering by Andrey Atuchin; courtesy Anthony R. Fiorillo


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