During routine excavation work beneath the parking lot of a prominent Denver museum, paleontologists made an unexpected breakthrough-unearthing fossilized remains believed to belong to a previously undocumented dinosaur species. This discovery provides a rare glimpse into the prehistoric ecosystem that once thrived in what is now Colorado. The fossil, remarkably well-preserved despite decades beneath urban infrastructure, includes significant skeletal fragments that experts suggest could rewrite parts of the region’s dinosaur lineage.

The Denver Natural History Society has rapidly assembled a multidisciplinary team to analyze the find, utilizing advanced imaging techniques and comparative anatomy studies. Key features identified so far include:

  • Distinctive skull morphology unlike any known raptor or herbivore in the area
  • Robust limb bones suggesting unique locomotion capabilities
  • Trace fossil evidence indicative of social behavior or nesting sites…