Alberta chasmosaur fossil could shed light on the strange-looking horned beast
Two years after paleontologist Jordan Mallon of the Canadian Museum of Nature and his team discovered the skull of a chasmosaur while going through a dinosaur bonebed in Alberta, he finally got to see a helicopter lift it into the air.
“There’s no roads down to the site, it’s very remote,” Mallon said Tuesday from Brooks, Alta., where the chopper was refuelling as it made its way from the spot along the South Saskatchewan River back to Calgary after completing the lift last month.
Comparing it to “a rhinoceros on steroids,” Mallon said this particular chasmosaur has turned out to be a particularly rare specimen with a long brow horn.
The unusual looking dinosaur, which had a frill resembling a giant flap behind its head, was a plant-eater that lived about 75 million years ago. A relative of triceretops, but smaller, the chasmosaur walked on all fours and had horns.


