Dinosaurs' Rise to Dominance Was Gradual

This scene depicts recreated dinosaurs and dinosauromorphs from the Hayden Quarry of northern New Mexico. The coexistence during the Late Triassic of the dinosaur precursors Dromomeron romeri (lower left) and a Silesaurus-like animal (bottom center), and the dinosaurs Chindesaurus bryansmalli (top center, with crocodylomorph in its mouth) and a coelophysoid theropod (upper right), indicates that the rise of dinosaurs was prolonged rather than sudden.
(Image credit: Donna Braginetz, Science)

Fossils uncovered in New Mexico show dinosaurs co-existed with a closely related group of reptiles for millions of years before overtaking them to become the dominant land animals on Earth.

The finding, detailed in the July 20 issue of the journal Science, suggests the dinosaurs' rise to dominance was a gradual ascent rather than a sudden takeover. It challenges the notions that dinosaurs quickly replaced or out-competed their close relatives, the “dinosauromorphs ,” or that dinosauromorphs were long gone before the dinosaurs’ appearance.

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