Museum IDs New Species of Dinosaur 79
Uryugen writes "A new dinosaur species was a plant-eater with yard-long horns over its eyebrows, suggesting an evolutionary middle step between older dinosaurs with even larger horns and the small-horned creatures that followed, experts said.
The dinosaur's horns, thick as a human arm, are like those of triceratops — which came 10 million years later. However, this animal belonged to a subfamily that usually had bony nubbins a few inches long above their eyes"
I For One (Score:3, Funny)
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Re:Oh no he didn't (Score:5, Funny)
Not at all. The fossils are real, but the dinosaurs co-existed with humans relatively recently, probably between the time when God created the Earth and the middle ages - and some dinosaurs probably still exist today. I can prove all of this because it's written in an old book. It's also written plainly in the Dinosaur article on Conservapedia [conservapedia.com].
(I'm thinking of signing up as a Conservapedia editor purely to expand on articles like these.)
Re:Oh no he didn't (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, Wikipedia are no-longer the least authoritative source of information on the internet.
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As if to reinforce the continuing spread of misinformation, there is a christian theater not too far from me which is running a production showing men and dinosaurs living side-by-side. Sadly, they're not s
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Then again, if one needs to be told that a person who is bit by a radioactive spider can't then spin webs from their wrists or climb walls, that person has other problems.
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The biggest reason for the refutation is that the majority of these claims are based on the false stance that the Earth i
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The only real debate about the age of the Earth is the exact age. It's been creeping upwards for decades as new findings come to light but there is no doubt it is billions of years old.
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and no carbon dating.. thats been shown to be unreliable.
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If that's all that's holding you back then I suggest you look up parthenogenesis [wikipedia.org] some time.
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Ironically, going from a population of X living dinosaurs six months ago to 3*X living dinosaurs today would be one of the few literally true facts on Conservapedia.
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This site is an absolute comedy gold mine! Either that, or it's a huge troll.
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Their article on Stephen Colbert makes me doubt the site's a huge troll; if it was it would surely be full of glowing praise for the leading conservative thinker of our time. As it is, I'm pretty sure they don't get his criticism of Wikipedia; it's practi
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You know what that site needs? A few good Conservative Muslim Creationist contributors.
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The site is legit. It was founded by some fundie nut and his 37 homeschool victims.... errr I mean homeschool students. On the other hand, yes, many of the pages are troll. The site has been hugely vandalized. They have reverted the most blatant vandalism, however some of the vandals added Colbert style satire and the fundies are too crazy and stupid to be able to recognize the satire and they have accepted and "improved upon" many
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I'm not entirely sure this is true. Didn't God ask Abraham to set his son on fire? And didn't God play the situation entirely seriously right up until the last second, when he said something to the tune of, 'No, I was actually just testing you. A lamb would be fine.' Endless evidence for evolution and the extreme age of the Earth could be construed as a test of our faith in a literal interpretation of the Bible, just as 'Burn your son' was a test of Abraham in th
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2. Wikipedia's entry for the Renaissance denies any credit to Christianity, its primary inspiration.
Christianity is about as much the inspiration for the Renaissance as any fundamentalist christian's control-freak parents are for his converting to atheism.
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Its gratifying every time one of these "missing links" is found. My favorite is probably the lobe-finned fishes:
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/04/04 05_060405_fish_2.htm/ [nationalgeographic.com] http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/04/ph otogalleries/tetrapod/index.html/ [nationalgeographic.com]
Of course the creationists will just deny these anyway, but then again, they would never argued about this for so long if they were rational to begin with.
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Re:Oh no he didn't (Score:4, Informative)
Nice fine nonetheless, here are the "non-missing links":
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2006/04/0
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2004/04/p
More links (Score:3, Informative)
http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2002/11/11 20_021120_raptor.html [nationalgeographic.com]
Creationists try to deny this too, but there's concrete, physical evidence so you'd be a fool to deny it right?
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Science parades it's mistakes for all to see and punishes those responsible.
Religion canonizes its mistakes and sanctifies those responsible.
Big difference if you are concerned with reality.
Two Responses (Score:3, Funny)
Humans got the evolutionary shaft.
Human: "Oooh, look at me! I've got an enlarged Broca's region in my frontal lobe! DE-FENSE!"
Zuniceratops: "Oh yeah? Well how about this--BAM, the ole' horn in the eye!"
Good thing we're separated by millions of years...
</evolutionist's response>
--
<creationist's response>
For thousands of years, lawyers have been laying the foundation for the greatest devil inspired hoax to grace God's earth
</creationist's response>
Re:Two Responses (Score:5, Funny)
Zuniceratops: "Oh yeah? Well how about this--BAM, the ole' horn in the eye!"
Human: Oh, we have those, too. They're smaller, but they travel faster from these bow things we invented, and we can hit you from 100 feet away.
(Arrow "thwip" sound)
Zuniceratops: Ow! My eye!
(Arrow "thwip" sound)
Zuniceratops: Ow! My other eye!
Human: Ha ha ha! We're going to eat you!
Zuniceratops: Noooooo!
Human: And use your balls as an aphrodesiac.
Zuniceratops: OK, now that was unnecessary.
Human: And *these* are spears!
(woosh!)
Zuniceratops: Argh!
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Now with horns! (Score:1, Troll)
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# new species == # new grad students (Score:2)
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Did you give your resesarch assisatant the day off again?
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Nubbin == third nipple (Score:3, Insightful)
Horns and eyebrows (Score:2, Informative)
Fair enough. (Score:4, Funny)
Also (Score:2, Funny)
A New Source of Oil (Score:5, Funny)
Cool, a new source of oil!
And you guys said it wasn't renewable. See, that's why I like science. They are always finding new species. More oil. More oil. I'm going to go buy a Hummer.
Dino-Poop Power for the People.
Wait...Oh, I see the flaw. Nevermind.
wait... (Score:1)
Horny Animals (Score:1)
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You too, huh? I feel the same. It's one of the most surprising things I know. It's just baffling. I'm not even sure I believe it -- it just seems so far-fetched.
Yet amazingly -- it's true! They don't have horns! Unless you glue one or more horns on! Which is very dangerous to you *and* the whale, trust me on that.
'Lo and behold' (Score:3, Insightful)
Ryan named the new dinosaur Albertaceratops nesmoi, after the region and Cecil Nesmo, a rancher near Manyberries, Alberta, who has helped fossil hunters.
The creature was about 20 feet long and lived 78 million years ago.
The oldest known horned dinosaur in North America is called Zuniceratops. It lived 12 million years before Ryan's find, and also had large horns.
That makes the newly found creature an intermediate between older forms with large horns and later small-horned relatives, said State of Utah paleontologist Jim Kirkland, who with Douglas Wolfe identified Zuniceratops in New Mexico in 1998. He predicted then that something like Ryan's find would turn up.
"Lo and behold, evolutionary theory actually works," he said. - Lo and behold? We knew that evolution works for a long long time now, but does anyone know whether these remains can be used for DNA sequencing so an evolution map could be setup for such creatures?
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New dinosaur species? Unlikely (Score:2)
Perhaps there's a newly identified species?
I'll get my coat.
When I read the headline... (Score:4, Funny)
I've obviously been getting involved in too many evolution-related debates.
Re:When I read the headline... (Score:5, Funny)
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Hmm . . . sounds familiar (Score:1)
Moo (Score:2, Interesting)
How do we know this is indicative of an entire species, and not just a single freak of nature?
Skull fragment? (Score:1)
Finally! (Score:2, Funny)
Not extinct? (Score:2)
Badges? We don't need no stinking... (Score:2)