We Can Now Definitively Say That
Dinosaurs Liked To Snuggle (text in english)
At one point in what is now the Gobi
desert, a group of dinosaurs bunkered down as a sand storm engulfed them. Now,
70 million years later, the fossilized remains of the three oviraptors has been
uncovered, and scientists think that it might represent the first ever evidence
that some dinosaur species roosted together, not unlike crows or bats do today.
The remains of the dinosaurs, which
are thought to represent an as yet unnamed new species of oviraptorid, were
almost lost to science. They were illegally poached from Mongolia, and only
found by customs at the airport. It now seems that the bones may represent an
incredibly significant dinosaur find: the first example of dinosaurs sleeping
in a group.
The fossil consists of three
individuals, although the partiality of one means that only two can be studied
in any detail. They show that the dinosaurs were sat on their bellies, with
their long necks curled back, and their heads cradled by their arms. This, says
researcher Greg Funston, who is presenting his work at the Society of
Vertebrate Paleontology meeting this week, is similar to how modern ostriches
and emus bed down.
The remains show three dinosaurs
that were potentially roosting together. Greg F. Funston
From the size of the leg bones of
the unfortunate beasts, the scientists are able to estimate that at least two
of them weighed roughly 45 kilograms (100 pounds) each. Fossils of adults show
that oviraptors grew to around 75 kilograms (165 pounds), and another specimen
thought to have been less than a year old tipped the scales at 33 kilograms (73
pounds).
The researchers have therefore
estimated that these new ones were likely to have been between two and five
years old. Not only that, but as female oviraptors are known to have laid eggs
in large clutches, they also speculate that the dinosaurs may well have been
siblings.
They say that the close
configuration of the dinosaurs, in which they most likely would have been
touching each other when alive, suggests that they may have been huddling
together in order to keep warm, arguing that most modern animals that roost
rarely make body contact for any other reason.
But others have cast doubt on this
interpretation of the fossilized trio. Some researchers are instead suggesting
that perhaps as the sandstorm that eventually buried them rolled in, the
animals may have huddled together to sit it out. Or perhaps one of the
dinosaurs had simply found a good spot to bed down for the night, and a couple
of others wanted in on it.
Either way, regardless of which
interpretation you prefer, the fossil is certainly raising some intriguing
questions about the life and behavior of these animals as they stalked across
what is now the Mongolian desert all those millions of years ago.
http://pirforosellin.blogspot.gr/ -
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