Wednesday, December 23, 2009

A bird-like dinosaur that prowled an ancient

A bird-like dinosaur that prowled an ancient forest 125 million years ago used venom to subdue its aion gold prey, according to a new theory.

Sinornithosaurus's upper teeth resemble those of "rear-fanged" snakes which bite their prey and channel venom into the wound.

The dinosaur probably fed on the aion kina abundant birds which inhabited what is now north-east China.

The work appears in Proceedings of the aion kinah National Academy of Sciences journal.

Rear-fanged snakes are considered less dangerous than other venomous snakes.

The fangs in these snakes do not aion power leveling inject venom, but instead channel the poison along a groove on the outer surface of teeth that pierce their prey's flesh.

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