-
These dragons from deep-time
are incredible creatures.
-
They're bizzarre,
-
they're beautiful,
-
and there's very little
we know about them.
-
These thoughts were going
through my head
-
when I looked at the pages of
my first dinosaur book.
-
I was about 5-years-old at the time,
-
and I decided there and then
-
that I would become a paleontologist.
-
Paleontology allowed me
to combine my love for animals
-
with my desire to travel to
far-flung corners of the world.
-
And now, a few years later,
I've led several expeditions
-
to the ultimate far-flung corner
on this planet, the Sahara.
-
I've worked in the Sahara because
I've been on a quest
-
to uncover new remains of
a bizarre, giant predatory dinosaur
-
called Spinosaurus.
-
A few bones of this animal
have been found
-
in the deserts of Egypt
-
and were described about 100 years ago
by a German paleontologist.
-
Unfortunately, all his Spinosaurus
bones were destroyed in WWII.
-
So all we're left with are just
a few drawings and notes.
-
From these drawings,
-
we know that this creature, which lived
about 100 million years ago,
-
was very big,
-
it had tall spines on its back,
forming a magnificent sail,
-
and it had long, slender jaws,
a bit like a crocodile,
-
with conical teeth,
-
that may have been used
to catch slippery prey, like fish.
-
But that was pretty much
all we knew
-
about this animal for the next 100 years.
-
My fieldwork took me to the border region
between Morocco and Algeria,
-
a place called the Kem Kem.
-
It's a difficult place to work in.
-
You have to deal with sandstorms,
and snakes and scorpions,
-
and it's very difficult to find
good fossils there.
-
But our hard work paid off.
-
We discovered many incredible specimens.
-
There's the largest dinosaur bone
that had ever been found
-
in this part of the Sahara.
-
We found remains of giant
predatory dinosaurs,
-
medium sized predatory dinosaurs,
-
and seven or eight different kinds
of crocodile-like hunters.
-
These fossils were deposited
in a river system.
-
The river system was also home
to a giant, car-sized coelacanth,
-
a monster sawfish,
-
and the skies over the river-system
were filled with pterosaurs,
-
flying reptiles.
-
It was a pretty dangerous place,
-
not the kind of place where you'd want
to travel to if you had a time machine.
-
So we're finding all these
incredible fossils of animals
-
that lived alongside Spinosaurus,
-
but Spinosaurus itself proved
to be very elusive.
-
We were just finding bits and pieces
-
and I was hoping that we'd find
a partial skeleton at some point.
-
Finally, very recently,
-
we were able to track down a dig site
-
where a local fossil hunter found
several bones of Spinosaurus.
-
We returned to the site,
we collected more bones.
-
And so after 100 years we finally
had another partial skeleton
-
of this bizarre creature.
-
And we were able to reconstruct it.
-
We now know that
Spinosaurus had a head
-
a little bit like a crocodile,
-
very different from other
predatory dinosaurs,
-
very different from the T-Rex.
-
But the really interesting information
came from the rest of the skeleton.
-
We had long spines,
-
the spines forming the big sail.
-
We had leg bones, we had skull bones,
-
we had paddle-shaped feet, wide feet,
-
again, very unusual, no other
dinosaur has feet like this,
-
and we think they may have been
used to walk on soft sediment,
-
or maybe for paddling in the water.
-
We also looked at the fine,
microstructure of the bone.
-
The inside structure of Spinosaurus bones,
-
and it turns out that they're
very dense and compact.
-
Again, this is something we see in animals
that spend a lot of time in the water,
-
it's useful for buoyancy
control in the water.
-
We CT-scanned all of our bones
and built a digital Spinosaurus skeleton.
-
And when we looked
at the digital skeleton,
-
we realized, that yes, this was
a dinosaur unlike any other.
-
It's bigger than a T-rex, and yes,
-
the head has "fish-eating"
written all over it,
-
but really the entire skeleton has
"water-loving" written all over it:
-
dense bone, paddle-like feet,
and the hind limbs are reduced in size,
-
and again, this is something
we see in animals
-
that spend a substantial amount
of time in the water.
-
So, as we fleshed out our Spinosaurus
-
-- I'm looking at muscle attachments
and wrapping our dinosaur in skin --
-
we realize that we're dealing
with a river monster,
-
a predatory dinosaur, bigger than a T-Rex,
-
the ruler of this ancient river of giants,
-
feeding on the many aquatic animals
I showed you early on.
-
So that's really what makes this
an incredible discovery.
-
It's a dinosaur like no other.
-
And some people told me, "Wow,
this is a once-in-a-lifetime discovery.
-
There're not many things left
to discover in the world."
-
Well, I think nothing could be
further from the truth.
-
I think the Sahara's
still full of treasures,
-
and when people tell me there are
no places left to explore,
-
I like to quote a famous dinosaur hunter,
Roy Chapman Andrews,
-
and he said, "Always, there has been
an adventure just around the corner.
-
And the world is still full of corners."
-
That was true many decades ago
-
when Roy Chapman Andrew
wrote these lines.
-
And it is still true today.
-
Thank you.
-
(Applause).