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NewsOctober 23, 2014

WASHINGTON -- Nearly 50 years ago, scientists found bones of two large, powerful dinosaur arms in Mongolia and figured they had discovered a fearsome critter with killer claws. Now scientists have found the rest of the dinosaur and have new descriptions for it: goofy and weird...

By SETH BORENSTEIN ~ Associated Press
This artistÂ’s rendering shows a Deinocheirus. The dinosaur was 16 feet tall, 36 feet long and weighed seven tons with a duckbill on its head and a humplike sail on its back.
This artistÂ’s rendering shows a Deinocheirus. The dinosaur was 16 feet tall, 36 feet long and weighed seven tons with a duckbill on its head and a humplike sail on its back.

WASHINGTON -- Nearly 50 years ago, scientists found bones of two large, powerful dinosaur arms in Mongolia and figured they had discovered a fearsome critter with killer claws.

Now scientists have found the rest of the dinosaur and have new descriptions for it: goofy and weird.

The beast probably lumbered on two legs like a cross between TV dinosaur Barney and Jar Jar Binks of Star Wars fame. It was 16 feet tall and 36 feet long, weighing seven tons, with a duckbill on its head and a hump-like sail on its back. Throw in those killer claws, tufts of feathers here and there, and no teeth and try not to snicker.

And if that's not enough, it ate like a giant vacuum cleaner.

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That's Deinocheirus mirificus, which means "terrible hands that look peculiar." It is newly re-imagined after a full skeleton was found in Mongolia and described in a paper released Wednesday by the journal Nature. About 70 million years old, it's an ancestral relative of the modern ostrich and belongs to the dinosaur family often called ostrich dinosaurs.

"Deinocheirus turned out to be one the weirdest dinosaurs beyond our imagination," study lead author Yuong-Nam Lee, director of the Geological Museum in Daejeon, South Korea, said in an email.

When scientists in 1965 found the first forearm bones nearly 8 feet long many of them envisioned "a creature that would strike terror in people," said University of Maryland dinosaur expert Thomas Holtz Jr., who wasn't part of the study.

"Now it's a creature that would strike bemusement, amazement," Holtz said.

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