The Paleontologist community in China and around the world are all aflutter over a recent find in the Erlian Basin of Inner Mongolia.   

Known more for its heavy oil potential and favorite export - pollution, northeastern China is the preferred stomping ground for the savvy petroleum geologist.

As a complete aside, it also boasts the prettiest portion of the gene pool, or so says one of my stomping friends having explored much of Asia. So, h
ome to pretty women today and, as it would seem, an enormous bird-like dinosaur some 70 million years ago.

Fancy that.

Gigantoraptor erlianensis was a bird-like dinosaur with a head like a parrot. At 25 feet in length, he would have been both a worthy predator and tasty prey. Only a youngster when he passed away, Gigantoraptor erlianensis, would have been a worthy competitor with his robust frame - a nail in the coffin for the notion that dinosaurs shrank in size as they developed bird-like characteristics.

This big fella, weighing in around 3,000 lbs, would have been roaming around with the duckbilled dinos and seeing the first flowering plants to grace the planet.

This early bird was definitely big enough to get the worm. And if you were able to fry this little (err, big) baby, you'd have BBQ bragging rights for a long time to come.