The New York Times, January 26, 2006
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NEW YORK — Scientists at the American Museum of Natural History have discovered a fossil in New Mexico that looks like a six-foot-long, two-legged dinosaur similar to a tyrannosaur or a velociraptor. But it is actually an ancient relative of modern alligators and crocodiles.
The discovery is a striking example of how completely different categories of animals can evolve the same kind of body over and over again.
For almost 60 years, the 210-million-year-old fossil had been hiding in plain sight. It was lodged in a slab of rock dug up in 1947 in New Mexico by a team led by Dr. Edward Colbert, a paleontologist at the natural history museum.
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