Meet the Lokiceratops, a new dinosaur species found in Montana : Short Wave : NPR
Meet the Lokiceratops, a new dinosaur species found in Montana : Short Wave A brand new species of ceratops, or horned dinosaur, was recently discovered in northern Montana. The dinosaur is called Lokiceratops rangiformis, after the Norse god Loki, and is believed to have lived roughly eighty million years ago. The bones of the plant-eating dinosaur were found on private land in an area well known for its large amount of fossils, and at first, researchers thought the bones belonged to another species of dinosaur!

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Named after the Norse god Loki, meet Lokiceratops, a new horned dinosaur species

Named after the Norse god Loki, meet Lokiceratops, a new horned dinosaur species

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Reconstruction of a Lokiceratops rangiformis being surprised by a crocodilian in the 78-million-year-old swamps that would have existed in what is now northern Montana. Andrey Atuchin/Museum of Evolution hide caption

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Andrey Atuchin/Museum of Evolution

Reconstruction of a Lokiceratops rangiformis being surprised by a crocodilian in the 78-million-year-old swamps that would have existed in what is now northern Montana.

Andrey Atuchin/Museum of Evolution

A brand new species of ceratops, or horned dinosaur, was recently discovered in northern Montana. This discovery was published in the journal PeerJ last week.

The dinosaur is called Lokiceratops rangiformis, after the Norse god Loki, and is believed to have lived roughly eighty million years ago. Researchers named it so for two reasons:

  1. Like all ceratops, it has horns on his head — and in this case, they remind researchers of the blades on Loki's helmet.
  2. The recovered skull currently resides in the Museum of Evolution in Denmark, one of the Scandinavian countries responsible for the story of Loki.

The second part of the name, rangiformis, refers to the horns not being symmetrical, like caribou.

The bones of the plant-eating dinosaur were found on private land in an area well known for its large amount of fossils. At first, researchers thought it was a known dinosaur, Medusaceratops lokii. "But once we started to puzzle this dinosaur back together, we quickly realized that we had something totally different on our hands," says Joseph Sertich, a paleontologist and co-author of the study.

Over the years, researchers have found five distinct species of ceratops in the area. The study authors say this points to how diverse and rapidly evolving the dinosaur populations were at the time. Furthermore, they think science is only beginning to scratch the surface of dinosaur diversity in the region.

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Today's episode was produced and fact-checked by Rachel Carlson. It was edited by Rebecca Ramirez. Kwesi Lee was the audio engineer.