2025-08-28 バーミンガム大学

Artist’s impression of Spicomellus Afer (Credit: Matt Dempsey)
<関連情報>
- https://www.birmingham.ac.uk/news/2025/bizarre-armoured-dinosaur-spicomellus-afer-had-spikes-sticking-out-from-its-neck-fossils-show
- https://www.nature.com/articles/s41586-025-09453-6
世界最古のアンキロサウルスに極限の装甲 Extreme armour in the world’s oldest ankylosaur
Susannah C. R. Maidment,Driss Ouarhache,Kawtar Ech-charay,Ahmed Oussou,Khadija Boumir,Abdessalam El Khanchoufi,Alison Park,Luke E. Meade,D. Cary Woodruff,Simon Wills,Mike Smith,Paul M. Barrett & Richard J. Butler
Nature Published:27 August 2025
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09453-6
Abstract
The armoured ankylosaurian dinosaurs are best known from Late Cretaceous Northern Hemisphere ecosystems, but their early evolution in the Early–Middle Jurassic is shrouded in mystery due to a poor fossil record1,2. Spicomellus afer was suggested to be the world’s oldest ankylosaur and the first from Africa, but was based on only a single partial rib from the Middle Jurassic of Morocco3. Here we describe a new, much more complete specimen that confirms the ankylosaurian affinities of Spicomellus, and demonstrates that it has uniquely elaborate dermal armour unlike that of any other vertebrate, extant or extinct. The presence of ‘handle’ vertebrae in the tail of Spicomellus indicates that it possessed a tail weapon, overturning current understanding of tail club evolution in ankylosaurs, as these structures were previously thought to have evolved only in the Early Cretaceous4. This ornate armour may have functioned for display as well as defence, and a later reduction to simpler armour with less extravagant osteoderms in Late Cretaceous taxa might indicate a shift towards a primarily defensive function, perhaps in response to increased predation pressures or a switch to combative courtship displays.


