Newly Discovered Dinosaur's Powerful Sniffer Helped It Track Prey

Dinosaur S. sullivani
Saurornitholestes sullivani attacks a subadult hadrosaur in this illustration.
(Image credit: Mary P. Williams)

While pursing his Ph.D. at the University of Pennsylvania, Steven Jasinski fulfilled a childhood dream: He discovered a brand-new dinosaur.

Jasinski, a doctoral candidate in the Department of Earth and Environmental Science and curator of paleontology and geology at the State Museum of Pennsylvania, was reviewing the museum's collection when he found a fossil that caught his eye. “As soon as I looked at the specimen, I could tell it was not the dinosaur it was thought to have been,” he told Live Science.

Latest Videos From
Kate Goldbaum
Staff Writer
Kate Goldbaum is a staff writer for Live Science. She fell in love with science while obtaining her degree in Biology from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, and became a high school science teacher so she could work with other curious minds. She frequently contributes stories to the Life’s Little Mysteries series on Live Science, which provides scientific explanations for everyday phenomena, general science topics, and anything that might make your day a bit more interesting.