A new dinosaur resembling a two-legged porcupine with fangs has been identified by a US palaeontologist.
Pegomastax africanus, meaning "thick jaw from Africa", measured about 60cm in length, had a short, parrot-shaped beak, a pair of stabbing canines with tall teeth tucked in behind, and porcupine-like bristles.
The fossil which held the specimen was chipped out of red rock in southern Africa in the 1960s, before it was found at Harvard University by Professor Paul Sereno, a palaeontologist at the University of Chicago.
Details of the dinosaur's anatomy and lifestyle have been published in the online journal ZooKeys.
Despite its long fanged teeth, Pegomastax was a herbivore.