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Newly Identified ‘Hell Chicken’ Species Helps Explain Time of the Dinosaurs

The species tells researchers that dinosaurs weren’t sliding toward extinction before the fateful asteroid hit.

Birdlike dinosaur Eoneophron infernalis was about the size of an adult human. Zubin Erik Dutta

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Were dinosaurs already on their way out when an asteroid hit Earth 66 million years ago, ending the Cretaceous, the geologic period that started about 145 million years ago? It’s a question that has vexed paleontologists like us for more than 40 years.

In the late 1970s, debate began about whether dinosaurs were at their peak or in decline before their big extinction. Scientists at that time noted that while dinosaur diversity seemed to have increased in the geologic stage that spanned 83.6 million to 71.2 million years ago, the number of species on the scene seemed to decrease during the last few million years of the Cretaceous. Some researchers have interpreted this pattern to mean that the asteroid that struck the Gulf of Mexico was simply the final blow for an already vulnerable group of animals.

However, others have argued that what looks like a decrease in the diversity ...

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