Antarctopelta was discovered in 1986, but it wasn't named until 2006. Cryolophosaurus was discovered in 1991 and named in 1994.
Dinosaurs have been found on all 7 continents, even Antarctica.
Scott and his team went to Antarctica and reported seeing fossils but did not collect them, as their primary goal was to reach the South Pole. They saw tree fossils but left them in place as they were not their primary focus during the expedition.
Fossils of tropical plants and animals would be least likely found in Antarctica, as the continent's climate and environment are not conducive to supporting such organisms.
It is estimated that the very first fossils were found 3 billions years ago. There is really no way to know if the dates were not recorded.
It is said that Antarctica was once a warm continent, Therefore it once held warm weather animals, But the climate started to change and it became cold, Therefore the fossils of warm blooded animals can be found in Antarctica. +++ The world's climate was warmer and Antarctica was part of a much larger continent lying further North.
No prehistoric horse fossils have been found in either Australia or Antarctica. The horse had not occupied the Australian continent prior to the arrival of the First Fleet in 1788, and they have never existed, to our knowledge, in Antarctica.
The Cycloptersaurous was first found in Antarctica back in 1967 but this wasn't the first dinosaur fossil found in the region. That distinction belongs to the Ankylosaur. Cycloptersaurous fossils were found throughout the continent.
plant fossils (glossopteris) were found there.
The first dinosaur whose fossils were found in Antarctica was Antarctopelta in 1986. It wasn't named until 2006, long after a second dinosaur, Cryolophosaurus, was found and named in 1991 and 1994, respectively.
So few dinosaur fossils have been found in Antarctica because the entire continent is covered in ice, making it hard to dig and/or search for large fossils.
Dinosaurs have been found on all 7 continents, even Antarctica.
Scott and his team went to Antarctica and reported seeing fossils but did not collect them, as their primary goal was to reach the South Pole. They saw tree fossils but left them in place as they were not their primary focus during the expedition.
So few dinosaur fossils have been found in Antarctica because the entire continent is covered in ice, making it hard to dig and/or search for large fossils.
The fossils were first found in 1983
The biggest problem with finding fossils in Antarctica is that everything is covered in ice, making it hard for archaeologists to excavate and find fossils.
The first dinosaur fossil ever found in Antarctica is called Antarctopelta. Its fossils date to the late Cretaceous period. Cryolophosaurus, the first theropod discovered in Antarctica, date back to the early Jurassic period.
The first fossil discovered in Antarctica was a Nodosaurid Ankylosaur. It was found in 1986.