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Hadrosaur, Northernmost Dinosaur Discovery, Survived Tough Nunavut Winters

Northernmost Dinosaur Find Was A Tough Canadian
UNITED KINGDOM - SEPTEMBER 09: Hadrosaurs or duck-billed dinosaurs of the family Hadrosauridae were herbivorous dinosaurs of the Upper Cretaceous Period. Colour printed illustration by Heinrich Harder from Tiere der Urwelt Animals of the Prehistoric World, 1916 Hamburg. Heinrich Harder (1858-1935) was a German landscape artist and book illustrator. These images come from a series of prehistoric creature cards published by the Reichardt Cocoa company in 1908. Natural historian Wilhelm Bolsche wrote the descriptive text. (Photo by Florilegius/SSPL/Getty Images)
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UNITED KINGDOM - SEPTEMBER 09: Hadrosaurs or duck-billed dinosaurs of the family Hadrosauridae were herbivorous dinosaurs of the Upper Cretaceous Period. Colour printed illustration by Heinrich Harder from Tiere der Urwelt Animals of the Prehistoric World, 1916 Hamburg. Heinrich Harder (1858-1935) was a German landscape artist and book illustrator. These images come from a series of prehistoric creature cards published by the Reichardt Cocoa company in 1908. Natural historian Wilhelm Bolsche wrote the descriptive text. (Photo by Florilegius/SSPL/Getty Images)

The world's northernmost dinosaur find is a Canadian, according to a new paper, and it's telling scientists a great deal about how the creatures lived during the Cretaceous period.

A vertebra from a duck-billed, plant-eating hadrosaur was discovered on Axel Heiberg Island in what is now known as Nunavut in 1992, The Alaska Dispatch reported.

A recent scientific paper published in the journal Arctic says that the dinosaurs lived there year-round despite a lack of daylight and food sources.

The island was separated from the rest of North America by two seas: one ran from the Arctic Ocean to the Gulf of Mexico, the other went through northern Saskatchewan and Manitoba, CBC News reported.

The geography separating the island from other land bodies meant that the dinosaurs couldn't have migrated south in the winter.

Temperatures on the island were, on average, about 15 degrees warmer than they are today, but the Arctic saw 24 hours of darkness in the winter so there would have been very few plants for dinosaurs to eat.

The hadrosaur likely survived by eating twigs, branches and decaying wood with nutritious fungi that were found in the stomachs and the excrement of their species, Matthew Vavrek, curator and head paleontologist at the Philip J. Currie Dinosaur Museum in Grande Prairie, Alta, told the network.

The fossil discovered in Nunavut doesn't mark the only time that this particular dinosaur has been found buried in Canadian soil. Two such fossils were found in Alberta last year.

In October 2013, a fossil of the creature's tail, was found by a pipeline crew in the province's northwest area.

A second hadrosaur skeleton with its bones intact, was found by a construction crew in the city of Leduc in the following month.

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