What if the giant sail-backed Spinosaurus wasn’t actually a swimming dinosaur at all? Despite some scientists’ impressions of the dinosaur, as well as the way it is portrayed in Jurassic Park 3, the Spinosaurus might not have been very good at diving.
This new theory is shared in-depth in a study featured in the latest edition of PLOS ONE. Paleontologists generally agree that the Spinosaurus was a fish-eater. But, what they haven’t always agreed on is how the dinosaur went about catching its meals and whether or not the giant dinosaur could actually dive under the water.
Some believed that the Spinosaurus would wade into the shallows close to shore, while others hinted that it was an aquatic pursuit predator that would dive deep into the water to hunt for its dinner. This new research, though, suggests that the dinosaur with a giant sail on its back was likely a semi-aquatic predator that hunted from the shallows, as many have always thought.
But if so many already thought this, then what spurred the new study? Well, back in 2022, a group of researchers published a paper suggesting that the bone density of the Spinosaurus’ thigh and rib bones could have allowed it to be more of a deep aquatic creature, diving under the surface to hunt for its meals.
However, the new paper didn’t specifically set out to prove exactly what Spinosaurus’ lifestyle was. But it says that the evidence right now suggests that it was what people thought it was all along: A semi-aquatic dinosaur that hunted similarly to modern-day herons.