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Mononykus Olecranus
Mononykus olecranus

Image: Mononykus olecranus dinosaur
Mononykus olecranus
Image © National Geographic Society

Mononykus Olecranus Profile

 

 

Mononykus olecranus is a rather strange dinosaur that has perplexed scientists and resisted a definitive classification.

Mononykus's most distinctive feature is a pair of short, stunted forelimbs, each of which had only one functional finger and claw. The strange physiology of these short limbs has given rise to several competing hypotheses about the ancient animal's behavior.

The small limbs' orientation may have made them useless for snatching prey or digging burrows. They may have been used to dig into nests of insects or to rend plants for digestion.

But some scientists believe that the unusual arms were used to hook and pull ants from their lairs in much the same manner used by some modern anteaters or pangolins. These animals also feature a single digit and elongated claw. This would be a rather unusual behavior for a dinosaur since most others were either confirmed vegetarians or formidable predators.

Still other researchers have suggested that Mononykus was not a birdlike dinosaur at all but an ancient, flightless bird. This interpretation arises because of a keel, or ridge, that runs down the animal's sternum, which is like that found in many birds.

Fast Facts

Type: Prehistoric
Diet: Carnivore
Size: 3 ft (1 m) long
Did you know? Mononykus's muscle-bound elbow reveals that its stubby arms were extremely powerful.
Protection status: Extinct
Size relative to a 6-ft (2-m) man:
Illustration of the animal's relative size

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