BUDAPEST, Jan 8 (Bernama-Xinhua) -- Hungarian researchers have identified a new ceratopsian dinosaur skull fossil from western Hungary, providing the strongest evidence to date that horned dinosaurs lived in Europe during the Late Cretaceous period, scientists said on Wednesday, reported Xinhua.
The fossil, attributed to Ajkaceratops Kozmai, was unearthed at the Iharkut (central Hungary) fossil site in the Bakony Mountains and studied by an international research team led by palaeontologist Attila Osi of Eotvos Lorand University (ELTE).
The research findings were published in the scientific journal Nature.
The discovery suggests that ceratopsian dinosaurs, a group that includes the well-known Triceratops, were not limited to Asia and North America, as previously believed, but were also present and more diverse in Europe.
Scientists said the fossils date back around 85 million years, when much of present-day Europe consisted of island chains along the margins of the ancient Tethys Sea.
The findings were presented at a press conference held at ELTE's Faculty of Science in Budapest on Wednesday.
The university officials and researchers said the newly analysed skull fossil helps rewrite the evolutionary history of European dinosaurs and highlights the scientific importance of the long-running Iharkut excavation programme.
--BERNAMA-XINHUA
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