'Cut down in their prime': Dinosaurs were thriving in Africa before the asteroid hit

The discovery of predatory dinosaurs in marine sediments in Morocco suggests life was abundant and diversifying at the end of the Cretaceous period.

More and more dinosaurs are being discovered in Africa, painting new picture of life just before the asteroid hit.
More and more dinosaurs are being discovered in Africa, painting new picture of life just before the asteroid hit.
(Image credit: Art by Andrey Atuchin. Nicholas Longrich)

66 million years ago, the last dinosaurs vanished from Earth. We're still trying to understand why. New fossils of abelisaurs —  distant relatives of the tyrannosaurs —  from north Africa suggest that African dinosaurs remained diverse up to the very end. And that suggests their demise came suddenly, with the impact of a giant asteroid.

The causes of the mass extinction have been debated for two centuries. Georges Cuvier, the father of palaeontology, thought extinction was driven by catastrophes. Charles Darwin  thought gradual changes in the environment and competition between species slowly drove lineages extinct.

Senior Lecturer in Paleontology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Bath