The dinosaur is named Ugrunaaluk kuukpikensis which means ancient grazer of the Colville River. The remains were found along the Colville River in a geological formation in northern Alaska known as the Prince Creek Formation.
"The finding of dinosaurs this far north challenges everything we thought about a dinosaur's physiology. It creates this natural question. How did they survive up here?" said Florida State University Professor of Biological Science Greg Erickson.
The dig site - the Prince Creek Formation - is a unit of rock that was deposited on an arctic, coastal flood plain about 69 million years ago.
At the time they lived, Arctic Alaska was covered in trees because Earth's climate was much warmer as a whole. But, because it was so far north, the dinosaurs likely contended with months of winter darkness, even if it was not as cold as a modern-day winter.
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They lived in a world where the average temperature was about 6 degrees Celsius, and they probably saw snow.
Since the 1980s scientists from the University of Alaska Museum of the North, and other collaborative institutions, including Florida State University, have collected more than 9,000 bones from various animals as part of the excavation of the Prince Creek Formation.
The majority of the bones of the Ugrunaaluk kuukpikensis were collected from a single layer of rock called the Liscomb Bonebed. The layer, about 2 to 3 feet thick, contains thousands of bones of primarily this one species of dinosaur.
Researchers believe a herd of juveniles was killed suddenly to create this deposit of remains.
Researchers found that the Ugrunaaluk kuukpikensis is most closely related to Edmontosaurus, another type of duck-billed dinosaur that lived roughly 70 million years ago in Alberta, Montana and South Dakota.
But, the combination of features found in these skeletons were not present in Edmontosaurus or in any other species of duck-billed dinosaurs. In particular, researchers observed that the Ugrunaaluk kuukpikensis had very unique skeletal structures in the area of the skull, especially around the mouth.