Fossils from Mongolia, Argentina show some dinosaurs laid soft-shelled
eggs
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[June 19, 2020]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Scientists have
unearthed the first fossils of soft-shelled eggs laid by dinosaurs - two
disparate species from Argentina and Mongolia - in a discovery
suggesting that the earliest dinosaurs produced such eggs before some
lineages turned to hard shells.
The embryo-containing eggs - leathery on the outside rather than hard
and calcified like those of birds - belonged to a dinosaur from
Patagonia called Mussaurus from about 200 million years ago and one
called Protoceratops from the Gobi Desert from about 75 million years
ago, researchers said on Wednesday.
It had long been thought that all dinosaurs laid hard-shelled eggs, as
modern birds - the descendants of feathered dinosaurs - and crocodilians
do. Many turtles, lizards and snakes lay soft-shelled eggs. But
relatively few dinosaurs eggs had ever been found, and those belonged to
only a handful of dinosaur groups including the meat-eaters.
Finding soft-shelled eggs in such dissimilar species living far apart in
time and location indicates, the researchers said, that many lineages
including the first dinosaurs to appear 230 million years ago may have
laid such eggs. Soft-shelled eggs are not readily preserved as fossils.
Twenty-foot-long (6 meters) Mussaurus was an early member of the
sauropod lineage of long-necked plant-eaters. Its 5-inch (13-cm) egg was
rather spherical.
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A fossilized egg laid by Mussaurus, a long-necked, plant-eating
dinosaur that grew to 20 feet in length and lived in what is now
Argentina is seen in image released June 17, 2020. Diego Pol/Handout
via REUTERS
Sheep-sized herbivore Protoceratops was a member of the ceratopsian
lineage of beaked dinosaurs, many of which had horns though not this
one. Its 4-inch (10-cm) eggs were more oblong.
"This gives us a new perspective of the reproductive biology of
dinosaurs, indicating that the basal dinosaurs (most primitive
forms) were more primitive reptilian in their reproductive habits,"
said paleontologist Mark Norell of the American Museum of Natural
History in New York, lead author of the research published in the
journal Nature.
"This means that they laid soft-shelled eggs which were probably
buried in the sand or in vegetation. It also explains why fossil
calcified eggs are only known from a few groups of dinosaurs, and
only appear long after the origin of the group."
(Reporting by Will Dunham; Editing by Sandra Maler)
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