"All we are finding are new species," he said. "I think there are places where what we are seeing (is) evolving populations."
The new raptor is believed to be an ancestral relative of the younger and much larger Utahraptor, based on similarities in pieces of fossilized vertebrae recovered. In both species, the bundles of rods that jut out from the vertebrae to form the raptor's tail are shortened, Kirkland said.
The new dinosaur's name was based on the Ute Indian word for coyote, "yurgovuch," and for the location where it was found, itself named after Utah paleontologist Helmut Doelling, whose geological mapping of the Arches region led to the bone bed's discovery.
Raptors, or dromaeosaurs, are a diverse family of predatory dinosaurs known for their stiff tails and a large, recurved claw that protruded from the second toe of their hind feet.
Raptors ranged in size from as small as a mockingbird to as big as a bear, Kirkland said. Some were covered in feathers, although scientists don't believe they could fly.
Utah paleontologists first came across the Yurgovuchia specimen in 2005 and excavation began the next year, over time recovering sections of the vertebrae and a portion of a pelvis.
A scientific paper describing the Yurgovuchia finding, which is a collaboration between Utah Geological Survey paleontologists and raptor expert Phil Senter of the University of North Carolina, was published this week in the journal of Public Library Science.
Two other sets of bones that also appear to be from new species were recovered.
One set was found within feet of the Yurgovuchia at Doelling's Bowl. The third was a broken, but distinctive skeleton of a long tail, found at a nearby site, Kirkland said.
Both need more study and the Utah Geological Survey plans additional excavation work. Paleontologists were also working on the excavation of bones from a long-necked dinosaur that may represent yet another previously unknown species, he said.
"It's real exciting," Kirkland said.
(Editing By Cynthia Johnston and Todd Eastham)
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