Liverpool forward Mia Enderby has been taken to hospital with a suspected neck injury following her side’s 2-1 defeat at Tottenham.
She appeared to land on her neck after jumping for an aerial challenge and was taken from the field on a stretcher.
There were 22 minutes of stoppage time played at the end of the match, owing largely to Enderby’s injury.
Enderby, 20, has featured in all six of Liverpool’s Women’s Super League games this season and started against Spurs.
Former Sheffield United player Enderby signed a new two-year deal in the summer, having made 42 appearances and scored six goals in her first two seasons with the club.
Liverpool are already without Marie Hobinger and Sophie Roman Haug, who suffered anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) injuries before the international break.
The Reds are second-bottom at the WSL, having failed to pick up any points from their first six matches.
SCIENTISTS have discovered that a “punk rocker” dinosaur had metre-long spikes pointing out of its neck to protect it from predators.
The discovery came as analysis of fossils of the Spicomellus – the world’s oldest ankylosaur – was conducted by researchers, uncovering its elaborate armour.
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The Spicomellus is believed to have had metre-long spikes sticking out from its neckCredit: Reuters
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The dino roamed the Earth around 165 million years agoCredit: Reuters
The Spicomellus, referred to as one of the “strangest dinosaurs” to have ever lived, roamed the Earth around 165 million years ago and had bony spikes fused onto all of its ribs.
This ultra-rare feature has never been seen before in any other vertebrate species, living or extinct, according to scientists.
Ankylosaurs were a herbivorous group of dinosaurs known for their armoured, tank-like bodies and a club-shaped tail tip.
A team of palaeontologists recently discovered remains, helping to build on the original description of the animal, which was based on just one rib bone found near the town of Boulemane in Morocco, which was sold on to a researcher in 2019.
The new fossils revealed the dinosaur had spikes measuring 87 centimetres emerging from a bony collar around its neck.
These could have been even longer during the life of the Spicomellus, according to the research published in science journal Nature.
Professor Richard Butler, from the University of Birmingham and project co-lead, described the fossils as an “incredibly significant discovery.”
He said: “Spicomellus is one of the strangest dinosaurs that we’ve ever discovered.
“It’s utterly unlike any other found anywhere else in the world.
“I think it’s going to really capture the imagination of people around the world, and tell us a lot about the early evolution of the tank-like ankylosaurs.”
Brand new ‘American’ dinosaur revealed in London after 150 million years
He also told the BBC that the dino was the “punk rocker” of its time, alluding to its spiky looks which resemble loyal punk rock fans who may don spiky hair.
Professor Susannah Maidment of Natural History Museum, London, and the University of Birmingham, who co-led the team of researchers said the “absolutely bizarre” fossils were changing how scientists believe the armoured dinosaurs evolved.
She said: “When we originally named spicomellus, there were doubts that it was an ankylosaur at all.
“Now, not only can we confirm beyond a doubt that this interpretation was correct, but Africa’s only known ankylosaur is far weirder than anyone imagined.”
She added: “Spicomellus had a diversity of plates and spikes extending from all over its body, including metre-long neck spikes, huge upwards-projecting spikes over the hips, and a whole range of long, blade-like spikes, pieces of armour made up of two long spikes, and plates down the shoulder.
“We’ve never seen anything like this in any animal before.”
Professor Maidment said that while it is likely the armour evolved initially for defence purposes, it was probably used later to attract mates and show off to rivals.
The discovery of the spicomellus species was made after Professor Maidment acquired a rib bone from a fossil dealer in Cambridge in 2019.
Why did the dinosaurs die out?
Here’s what you need to know…
The dinosaur wipe-out was a sudden mass extinction event on Earth
It wiped out roughly three-quarters of our planet’s plant and animal species around 66 million years ago
This event marked the end of the Cretaceous period, and opened the Cenozoic Era, which we’re still in today
Scientists generally believe that a massive comet or asteroid around 9 miles wide crashed into Earth, devastating the planet
This impact is said to have sparked a lingering “impact winter”, severely harming plant life and the food chain that relied on it
More recent research suggests that this impact “ignited” major volcanic activity, which also led to the wiping-out of life
Some research has suggested that dinosaur numbers were already declining due to climate changes at the time
But a study published in March 2019 claimed that dinosaurs were likely “thriving” before the extinction event
A WOMAN’S body has been found chained by the neck and tied underwater with two concrete dumbbells at a popular fishing pier in Thailand.
The horror discovery was made after stunned locals spotted the corpse floating close to shore.
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Shocked locals spotted the corpse floating near popular fishing pier in ThailandCredit: Khaosod
The body was found on Friday near Ban Tha Yai pier in Phang Nga’s Mueang district.
Police Lieutenant Pheerawit Chaichanyut of Khok Kloi Police Station said officers rushed to the scene with Kusoltham Foundation rescue workers after receiving an emergency call.
The victim – whose identity, address, and nationality are still unknown – was wearing grey shorts and a brown round-neck T-shirt.
Police believe she had been dead for around two days before being found in the murky waters.
A heavy chain had been wrapped tightly around her neck and secured to two concrete dumbbells in what investigators believe was a calculated attempt to keep the body hidden on the seabed.
But despite the grim effort, currents carried her to the surface and she drifted close to land.
“This is a serious case, and we are treating it as a possible murder,” Pol. Lt. Pheerawit said.
“The way the body was weighted down points towards an attempt to conceal it.”
The body has been sent for a full autopsy to determine the cause of death and whether the woman was alive before entering the water.
Local leaders and neighbouring districts have been told to check missing persons reports for anyone matching her description.
Cops will meanwhile scour CCTV from the pier and surrounding waterways for suspicious movements in the days before the grim find.
Anyone with information – particularly those who may have noticed unusual activity near Ban Tha Yai pier – is urged to contact police immediately.
The case echoes a similar discovery in February when a fisherman in Rayong found a woman’s decomposed body inside a locked suitcase weighted with two 10kg dumbbells.
Her identity also remains unknown.
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