Majungasaurus
Majungasaurus was a meat-eating dinosaur from the Late Cretaceous Period. It lived right up until the end of the age of dinosaurs, about 66 million years ago, in what is now Madagascar, off the coast of Africa. Majungasaurus was a relative of Carnotaurus, another meat-eating dinosaur from Argentina.
Classification: Saurischia. Theropoda. Abelisauridae.
Genus: Majungasaurus (“Mahajanga lizard”)
Species: M. crenatissimus
Because of its strange skull shape, it’s believed that Majungasaurus (and other abelisaurids) may have hunted differently than other meat-eating dinosaurs. Unlike other meat-eaters, which mostly had long and narrow snouts similar to modern canines (dogs), abelisaurids had blunter snouts like those of modern felines (cats). This may mean they had similar feeding and predatory habits as well. Canines usually subdue their prey through numerous bites to slowly drain the animal’s strength, while felines grab once and hold on until the animal is sufficiently exhausted.
Majungasaurus’s legs were short but also very powerful. It may not have been particularly fast, but it could have made up for that with strength. Because of its powerful build and strong jaws, some scientists believe it may have hunted large long-necked sauropods.
Majungasaurus was medium sized for a theropod, but still quite large all things considered. Its rear legs were relatively short and thick, giving the dinosaur a low profile. Its tail was long and its arms, like other related abelisaurids, were very small to the point of uselessness.
Another trait it shared with its fellow abelisaurids was a short, deep skull. However, unlike its relatives, its skull was quite wide and not as thin as that of abelisaurids like Carnotaurus.
While Carnotaurus had two protruding horns on its head, one above each eye, Majungasaurus had a single blunt horn poking out of the middle of its forehead. This unique structure initially caused scientists to believe Majungasaurus was a dome-headed pachycephalosaur. It is believed this horn may have been used for display, and also could have been used for combat between Majungasaurus individuals.
LENGTH: 6-7 meters (20-23 feet)
WEIGHT: 1,500-1,700 kg (3,300-3,750 lbs.)
Madagascar is a very old island, and had already separated from the mainland by the time Majungasaurus roamed the land. Majungasaurus likely dwelled on a coastal floodplain in a semi-dry environment, with separated wet and dry seasons.
While it was not large compared to theropods in general, it was probably one of the largest predators on its isolated island home, which it shared with dinosaurs including Masiakasaurus and the long-necked sauropod Rapetosaurus.
Paleontologist Charles Deperet discovered teeth, claws and a few other bones in Madagascar in 1896, and assigned them to the genus Megalosaurus. At the time, “Megalosaurus” was basically a catch-all genus for all unknown remains believed to belong to meat-eating dinosaurs. The teeth were later reassigned to the genus Dryptosaurus.
Eventually, in 1955, more material was discovered, including a unique curved jaw bone and more teeth that were very similar to those Deperet had uncovered many years earlier. Rene Lavocat described these new findings and named the dinosaur Majungasaurus, after an older spelling of Mahajanga, the province where the bones were found.
In 1979 a piece of a dome shaped dinosaur skull was discovered by Hans-Dieter Sues and Philippe Taquet. They believed it belong to a pachycephalosaur and named the dinosaur Majungatholus. Later, in 1996, a nearly complete skull was found, and it was discovered that the dinosaur in question was not a pachycephalosaur, but an abelisaurid. Eventually even more material was found, and it was revealed that the dinosaurs these remains belonged to was the same as the one named years before by Rene Lavocat: Majungasaurus. With all of the additional skeletal material, Majungasaurus is almost completely known.
References:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Majungasaurus
Paul, G. (2016). The Princeton Field Guide to Dinosaurs, 2nd Edition. Princeton, New Jersey: University Press Princeton.
Safari Ltd Majungasaurus Toys:
Wild Safari Prehistoric World Majungasaurus Figure