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Science

Submission + - Paleontologists Discover World's Horniest Dinosaur

Ponca City, We love you writes: "The Guardian reports that paleontologists have uncovered the remains of an ancient beast called Kosmoceratops richardsoni that stood 16 feet tall with a 6-foot skull equipped with 15 horns and lived 76 million years ago in the warm, wet swamps of what is now southern Utah. "These animals are basically oversized rhinos with a whole lot more horns on their heads. They had huge heads relative to their body size," says Scott Sampson, a researcher at the Utah Museum of Natural History. Kosmoceratops had one horn over its nose, one over each eye, one protruding from each cheekbone and a row of ten across the frill at the back of its head. "As far as we know it's the most ornate-headed dinosaur ever found, with so many well-developed horns on its head," adds Sampson. Many palaeontologists now believe that dinosaurs' horns were often more for sexual display and fighting off other members of the same species, much like rutting deer. The animal lived in Laramidia, an area known as the "lost continent," along with other herbivores and carnivores predators like raptors and tyrannosaurs. "At the time, this was very much a swamp environment and very lush. The climate was more Mediterranean. It would have been a great place to hang out except for all the tyrannosaurs.""
Image

YouTube Videos On Display At the Guggenheim 19

crimeandpunishment writes "Move over Picasso....here comes 'Charlie bit me.' 125 YouTube videos are now on display at Guggenheim museums around the world. The videos, chosen from more than 23,000 submissions, are part of an exhibit called 'YouTube Play: A Biennial of Creative Video', featuring both well-known YouTube hits and barely-seen works by students. This group of videos will be narrowed down to about 20 entries, which will be featured at the Guggenheim in New York next month." We ran a story about this in June when museum officials started accepting submissions.
Data Storage

Toshiba To Launch First 512GB Solid State Drive 256

designperfection9 writes "Toshiba said Thursday that it will show off a new line up of NAND-flash-based solid state drives with the industry's first 2.5-inch 512GB SSD. The drive is based on a 43 nanometer Multi-Level Cell NAND and claims to offer a high level of performance and endurance for use in notebooks as well as gaming and home entertainment systems."

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