Episode 107: Ankylosaurus and Stegosaurus

Published: Feb. 18, 2019, 7 a.m.

b'This week we\\u2019re going to learn about some armored dinosaurs, a suggestion by Damian!\\n\\nI love that there\\u2019s a stock picture of an ankylosaurus:\\n\\n\\n\\nStegosaurus displaying its thagomizer:\\n\\n\\n\\nThagomizer explained:\\n\\n\\n\\nShow transcript:\\n\\nWelcome to Strange Animals Podcast. I\\u2019m your host, Kate Shaw.\\n\\nThis week\\u2019s episode is another suggestion, this one from Damian, who wants to learn about armored dinosaurs like stegosaurus. It turns out that stegosaurus and its relatives are really interesting, so thanks to Damian for the suggestion!\\n\\nWe\\u2019ll start with ankylosaurus, which lived near the end of the Cretaceous period, right before all the non-avian dinosaurs went extinct, about 65 million years ago. A lot of paleontologists pronounce it ANKillosaurus, but it\\u2019s properly pronounced anKYlosaurus and for once, I\\u2019m finding the correct pronunciation easier, probably because it has the name Kylo right in the middle, like Kylo Ren of Star Wars.\\n\\nThere are a lot of species in the ankylosauridae family, but ankylosaurus was the biggest and is probably the one you would recognize since it\\u2019s a popular dinosaur. It\\u2019s the one with a big club on the end of its tail, but its leathery skin was studded with armored plates called osteoderms or scutes that made it look something like a modern crocodile. It also had spikes along its sides, although they weren\\u2019t as long or as impressive as some of the other ankylosaurids\\u2019 spikes.\\n\\nWe don\\u2019t know exactly how big ankylosaurus could get because we\\u2019re still missing some key bones like the pelvis, but paleontologists estimate it could grow around 33 feet long, or ten meters. Is legs were relatively short and its body wide, something like a turtle. When it felt threatened, it may have just dropped to the ground to protect its unarmored belly and laid there like a huge spiky tank.\\n\\nBecause we only have a few fossil specimens of ankylosaurus, there\\u2019s actually a lot we don\\u2019t know about it. Much of what we do know is actually mostly from ankylosaurus relatives. Researchers think ankylosaurus actually may not have been a typical ankylosaurid. They aren\\u2019t sure if the few fossils found mean it was a rare animal or if it just lived inland, away from water, since fossilization is much more common when water is involved. It lived in what is now North America, although it had relatives that lived throughout much of the world.\\n\\nAnkylosaurus had a beak something like a turtle\\u2019s but it also had teeth that it probably used to strip leaves from stems before swallowing them whole. It probably ate ferns and low-growing shrubs. It had a massive gut where plant material would have been fermented and broken down in what was probably a long digestive process. But some researchers think it may have mostly eaten grubs, worms, and roots that it dug up with its powerful forelegs or its beak, sort of like a rooting hog. Its nostrils are smaller and higher on its nose than in other ankylosaurids, which could be an adaptation to keep dirt out. This might also explain why ankylosaurus appears different from other ankylosaurids, which definitely ate plants.\\n\\nAnkylosaurus had a remarkably small brain for its size. Paleontologists think it may have used its massive tail club as a defensive weapon, but they don\\u2019t know for sure. The tail might just have been for display, or maybe males used their tail clubs to fight during mating season. It probably couldn\\u2019t walk very fast and was probably cold-blooded, which allowed it to survive after other dinosaurs went extinct after the big meteor struck. Eventually the plants it ate started going extinct, and since it was a big animal that needed a lot of food, it finally went extinct too. Researchers think bird ancestors survived because they were small and could live by eating plant seeds.\\n\\nOne interesting thing about ankylosaurs of all kinds is how they kept from overheating. Large bodies retain heat better than small bodies, which is why polar bears and mammoths are such ch...'