Dramatic fossil shows pugnacious mammal attacking a dinosaur
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[July 19, 2023]
By Will Dunham
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - While there is little doubt that many a Mesozoic
mammal became a meal for a dinosaur, it may come as a surprise to learn
that some mammals also dined on dinos.
A dramatic fossil unearthed in northeastern China shows a pugnacious
badger-like mammal in the act of attacking a plant-eating dinosaur,
mounting its prey and sinking its teeth into its victim's ribs about 125
million years ago, scientists said on Tuesday.
Dating to the Cretaceous Period, it shows the four-legged mammal
Repenomamus robustus - the size of a domestic cat - ferociously
entangled with the beaked two-legged dinosaur Psittacosaurus
lujiatunensis - as big as a medium-sized dog. The scientists suspect
they were suddenly engulfed in a volcanic mudflow and buried alive
during mortal combat.
"Dinosaurs nearly always outsized their mammal contemporaries, so
traditional belief has been that their interactions were unilateral -
the bigger dinosaurs always ate the smaller mammals," said
paleobiologist Jordan Mallon of the Canadian Museum of Nature in Ottawa,
who helped lead the study published in the journal Scientific Reports.
"Here, we have good evidence for a smaller mammal preying on a larger
dinosaur, which is not something we would have guessed without this
fossil," Mallon added.
Most mammals during the Mesozoic Era, the age of dinosaurs, were
shrew-sized bit players in the larger theater of life, doing well to
avoid becoming someone else's lunch. Repenomamus shows at least some
mammals gave as good as they got.
"I think what's key here is that Mesozoic food webs were more complex
than we had imagined," Mallon said.
The area in Liaoning Province where the virtually complete fossil was
found is called the "Chinese Pompeii" owing to various fossils of
animals buried in volcanic eruptions.
Examining the fossil was like a crime scene analysis. Repenomamus is
perched atop the prone Psittacosaurus, gripping the jaw and hind leg
while biting into the ribcage. Repenomamus measures 1-1/2 feet (47 cm)
long. Psittacosaurus is 4 feet (120 cm) long. Both are thought to be not
quite full adults.
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Fossilized skeletons dating to about 125
million years ago from China showing the entanglement of the
dinosaur Psittacosaurus lujiatunensis and the mammal Repenomamus
robustus are seen in this 2022 handout photograph. Scale bar equals
10 cm. Gang Han/Handout via REUTERS
"There have been specimens of carnivorous dinosaurs preying on
plant-eating dinosaurs before, but there has never been an example
of a mammal preying on a dinosaur," said Canadian Museum of Nature
paleontologist and study co-author Xiao-chun Wu.
It is rare to find fossils showing animals interacting. Another
fossil found in the 1970s in Mongolia shows two dinosaurs - predator
Velociraptor and plant-eater Protoceratops - fighting about 80
million years ago before being buried alive, perhaps in a collapsing
sand dune.
The researchers discounted the idea that the Repenomamus and
Psittacosaurus fossil showed a mammal merely scavenging a carcass.
"For one, the mammal is on top of the dinosaur as though it was
trying to subdue it, which the scavenging hypothesis doesn't account
for," Mallon said.
"Second, there are no bite marks on the bones of the dinosaur, which
we would expect if it had been sitting out for long, exposed to
scavengers. Lastly, the hind foot of the mammal is trapped by the
folded hind leg of the dinosaur, which is unlikely to have happened
if the dinosaur had already been dead when the mammal came across
it," Mallon added.
While Psittacosaurus was an early relative of the horned dinosaur
lineage, it lacked facial horns and a head crest. It possessed a
parrot-like beak to crop plant material.
Repenomamus, one of the dinosaur age's largest mammals, had short
and sprawling limbs, a long tail, a sinuous body, a robust skull and
shearing teeth. Mallon compared its appearance to the living Chinese
ferret-badger.
There was previous evidence of the dino-eating habits of Repenomamus.
One Repenomamus fossil from the same area had baby Psittacosaurus
bones in its stomach.
"What's unique about our fossil is the fact that it demonstrates
that Repenomamus was capable of tackling larger dinosaur prey,"
Mallon said.
(Reporting by Will Dunham, Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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