The armoured dinosaurs are believed to have been around five metres long, a metre tall and two tonnes in weight.
The specimens initially appeared to belong to a sub-species of armoured dinosaur in the Ankylosauria group, but there were some key differences.
Describing their research in the journal PLOS One, researchers named the species Europelta carbonensis, which means ‘Europe’s shield from coal’.
Europelta carbonensis is part of the nodosauridae family which were around during the Late Jurassic to the Late Cretaceous Period in North America, Asia, Antarctica and Europe.
Like other dinosaurs in the nodosauridae family, Europelta was a plant-eater and was covered in scaly armoured plates.
Before the nodosaurid ankylosaurs, their ancestors - polacanthid ankylosaurs - were the main armoured dinosaurs in both Europe and North America.
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Artistic reconstruction of Europelta carbonensis [Credit: Fundacion Conjunlo Palaeontologica de Teruel-Dinopolis (FCPTD] |
‘By 113 million years ago nodosaurid ankylosaurs have completely replaced them on both continents, yet are represented by distinctly different subfamilies on both continents,' he said.
As Europelta is closely related to other nodosaurs in Europe, the new finding suggests that Europe had become isolated from North America around 110 million years ago - rather than the 80 million years that many suggest.
Author: Ellie Zolfagharifard | Source: Daily Mail Online [December 05, 2013]