Reconstruction of Camarillasaurus cirugedae. Credit: Joschua Knüppe

Studies of newly discovered fossils of the predatory dinosaur Camarillasaurus cirugedae from Spain show that the giant bipedal spinosaurids from Africa apparently originated in Europe. An international team led by SNSB paleontologist Oliver Rauhut has now published these in the journal Palaeontologia Electronica.

Tyrannosaurus is perhaps the best-known bipedal predatory dinosaur—but not the largest known representative of this group: Spinosaurus occurred in Africa in the early Late Cretaceous period (about 95 million years ago) and was even larger, measuring up to 18 meters in length.

In collaboration with Spanish colleagues, Rauhut has now found new evidence that the gigantic spinosaurs had their roots in Europe. New finds and the re-examination of previously collected remains of the little-known predatory dinosaur Camarillasaurus cirugedae from the Lower Cretaceous period (about 128 million years ago) in Spain show that this species was a close relative of the giant North African spinosaurs.

Camarillasaurus was found in the central Spanish province of Teruel. The was originally classified as a ceratosaur—a group of predatory dinosaurs little known in Europe and whose occurrence in the Lower Cretaceous of Spain would represent a find "outside of space and time," as stated in the original publication. This interpretation was based on a few fragmentary remains described more than 10 years ago.

SNSB paleontologist Oliver Rauhut exposing the femur of Camarillasaurus cirugedae. Credit: Oliver Rauhut, SNSB-BSPG

During a new excavation campaign at the original fossil site, Rauhut and his colleagues from the University of Zaragoza found more remains of the dinosaur, including fragments of the jaw, tail vertebra and tooth as well as a and a foot claw. The new finds allow for the now published reinterpretation of the Spanish predatory dinosaur's family relationships. For example, the paleontologists found common features between Camarillasaurus and other spinosaurs in the lower jawbone.

Rauhut, dinosaur expert at the Bavarian State Collection of Paleontology and Geology (SNSB-BSPG), goes one step further: "Our indicate that various other representatives of the spinosaurids of the Iberian Peninsula are also on the evolutionary lineage leading to the North African spinosaurids. We suspect that the giant predatory dinosaurs of Africa originated in Europe."

Remains of various spinosaurs, mostly teeth, are common on the Iberian Peninsula, most of them embedded in continental deposits, including Camarillasaurus cirugedae. Researchers therefore assume that the animals lived and hunted in a terrestrial environment. The North African spinosaurus, on the other hand, is more recently interpreted as a fish eater that spent most of its time in the water, based on its anatomy. There are no finds from Spain to support this thesis as yet.

More information: Oliver W.M. Rauhut et al, Revision of the theropod dinosaur Camarillasaurus cirugedae from the Early Cretaceous (Barremian) of Teruel province, Spain, Palaeontologia Electronica (2025). .

Journal information: Palaeontologia electronica