UAF DINOSAUR HUNTER PUBLISHED IN "SCIENCE"
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
February, 7 2002
Fairbanks, Alaska Many different dinosaurs once roamed the earth
at high latitudes, but how well they adapted to the conditions at these
latitudes remains a mystery. One theory, discussed in the Feb. 8 issue
of the journal "Science," suggests the possibility of warm-blooded
dinosaurs. University of Alaska Museum Earth Sciences Curator and associate
professor Roland Gangloff, along with fellow researchers Thomas and Patricia
Rich in Melbourne, Australia, was invited to author the perspective paleontology
article titled "Polar Dinosaurs."
A possible explanation for the success of these polar dinosaurs is that
the climate at high latitudes may have been much milder than today due
to differences in the inclination of Earths axis. Although this
is presently unsupported by generally accepted geophysical theory, researchers
do know that the paleogeography of North America and Alaska was quite
different compared to the present based on plate tectonic models. Polar
dinosaurs still may have been exposed to more extreme conditions than
experienced at lower latitudes and Gangloff has concluded that the study
of polar dinosaurs provides potentially unique insights into their physiological
adaptations.
"These dinosaurs were doing quite well in high latitudes in both
hemispheres 110 - 65 million years ago," said Gangloff. "They
were well adapted and the evidence is so overwhelming it cries out to
be understood."
Most discoveries of high-latitude fossil beds have taken place in the
last 20 years because fossil finds are remote and travel and recovery
costs can be prohibitive. Alaska has the largest number of specimens and
varieties of dinosaurs in the Arctic or Antarctic and Alaskas North
Slope and the Alaska Peninsula hold the greatest potential for more dinosaur
discoveries.
One area in particular, along the lower stretches of the Colville River
on Alaskas North Slope, holds great promise for future investigations
especially when facilitated by permafrost tunneling.
"It is there that the greatest known potential exists for recovering
the most extensive polar record, one thats not restricted to a single,
brief period of time," said Gangloff.
Gangloff is preparing for his 14th research trip to the Colville site
in the summer of 2002. He will be leading several teams on the North Slope
to excavate and salvage a fairly complete ichthyosaur, a marine reptile
that resembles a whale, along with the most complete northern horned dinosaur,
or pachyrhinosaur, ever found in Alaska. Ft. Wainwrights helicopter
Company B, 4th Battalion, 123rd Aviation will assist in the removal of
the artifacts.
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CONTACT: Roland Gangloff, UA Museum Earth Sciences Curator at (907) 474-7862 or by e-mail at ffrag@uaf.edu or Kerynn Fisher, UA Museum Communications Coordinator at (907) 474-7862 or e-mail k.fisher@uaf.edu for more information.
CJB/02-07-02/02-042ma

