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Nest full of baby dinosaurs discovered

A 70-million-year-old nest of the dinosaur Protoceratops andrewsi has been found with evidence that 15 juveniles were once inside it, according to a paper in the latest Journal of Paleontology. 

The dinosaur remains in the nest. Researchers believe sand entombed the dinosaur family while the members were still alive [Credit: Dr. Kh. Tsogtbaatar]
While large numbers of eggs have been associated with other dinosaurs, such as the meat-eating Oviraptor or certain duck-billed hadrosaurs, finding multiple juveniles in the same dino nest is quite rare. 

"I, for one, cannot think of another dinosaur specimen that preserves 15 juveniles at its nest in this way," lead author David Fastovsky told Discovery News. 

Fastovsky, who is chair of the University of Rhode Island’s Department of Geosciences, and his colleagues analyzed the dinosaur remains along with the nest, which measured about 2.3 feet in diameter and was round and bowl-shaped. All were found at Djadochta Formation, Tugrikinshire, Mongolia, where it's believed sand “rapidly overwhelmed and entombed” the youngsters while they were still alive. 

The researchers conclude that the 15 dinosaurs all show juvenile characteristics. These include short snouts, proportionately large eyes, and an absence of adult characteristics, such as the prominent horns and large frills associated with adults of this species. At least 10 of the 15 fossil sets are complete. 

The nest and its contents imply that Protoceratops juveniles remained and grew in their nest during at least the early stages of postnatal development. The nest further implies that parental care was provided. 

The large number of offspring, however, also suggests that juvenile dinosaur mortality was high, not only from predation, but also from a potentially stressful environment. 

"Large clutches may have been a way of ensuring survival of the animals in that setting -- even if there was extensive parental care," Fastovsky said. "Mongolia was, at the time, a place with a variety of theropod dinosaurs, some of whom likely ate babies such as these." 

"The most obvious of these, found in the same deposits, is the (in)famous Velociraptor, a smallish nasty theropod with bad breath, for whom babies such as these would have made a nice bon bon," he continued. 

Yet another discovery previously found at the same locality is the famous "fighting dinosaurs" specimen in which a Protoceratops and Velociraptor appear to have been preserved together "locked in what was evidently mortal combat," Fastovsky added. Parents and other adults of the sheep-sized herbivorous species may then have spent much of their time fighting off such hungry predators. 

In a separate study, Lars Schmitz of the UC Davis Department of Evolution and Ecology, and colleagues studied bones surrounding what would have been the eyes of Protoceratops and other dinosaurs. The results allowed Schmitz and his team to conclude that this dinosaur and additional plant eaters were active both day and night. Velociraptor, on the other hand, was primarily a nocturnal carnivore, so night raids on Protoceratops nests must have taken place during the Late Cretaceous. 

Even if the juvenile dinosaurs and their parents "had a good sensory system to notice a predator closing in, the success rate of a nocturnal attack may be higher than a diurnal attack," Schmitz told Discovery News. 

Given the chances then of literally biting the (sand) dust or becoming dinner, it’s no wonder that some small dinosaurs had so many kids. 

"This story certainly isn't your parents' dinosaurs-living-in-the-lush-Cretaceous-steaming-jungles that was in vogue a generation or two ago," Fastovsky said. "We now know that dinosaurs lived everywhere and did just about everything terrestrial." 

The nest and its dinosaur family contents are currently housed at the Paleontological Center of the Mongolian Academy of Sciences, Ulan Baatar, Mongolia. 

Author: ennifer Viegas | Source: Discovery News [November 16, 2011]

Oviraptor dinosaurs used feathery tail to attract potential mates

Oviraptor dinosaurs may have waved their flexible tail feathers, in a way that resembles the habits of a modern-day peacock, to attract potential mates, a new study has suggested. 

Oviraptor philocerataps [Credit: Andrews, 1924]
The dinosaur lived in the late Cretaceous Period, about 75 million years ago and got its name, Latin for "egg thief", because the first specimen was found near a clutch of eggs as if the beast were stealing them, but it was later revealed that the eggs were likely its own. 

Scott Persons from the University of Alberta began studying the tails of various species of Oviraptor as part of a larger study on the tails of all theropods, a group of dinosaurs related closely to modern-day birds. 

According to him, the dinosaurs have unusually compact, flexible tails, and combined with a fan of feathers attached to the tail's end, this would have enabled Oviraptor to put on a show similar to that of a modern-day peacock. 

"The tail of an Oviraptor by comparison to the tail of most other dinosaurs is pretty darn short," Persons said. 

"But it's not short in that it's missing a whole bunch of vertebrae, it's short in that the individual vertebra within the tail themselves are sort of squashed together. So they're densely packed," he said. 

The dense bone arrangement would have made the tails especially flexible, like a person's spine with its many bone junctions can move more sinuously than an arm, which has only a couple of joints. 

The study also suggests that oviraptorids had particularly muscular tails, and fossil impressions reveal that they also came equipped with a fan of feathers at the end of their tails, attached to a hunk of fused vertebrae not unlike those found in the tails of modern-day birds. 

"If you combine that with having a muscular, very flexible tail, what you have is a tail that could, potentially at least, have been used to flaunt, to wave that tail-feather fan," Persons said. 

"If you think about things like peacocks, they often use their tails in courtship displays," he added.

Source: New Kerala [November 06, 2011]

First long-necked dinosaur fossil found in Antarctica

It's official, long-necked sauropod dinosaurs once roamed every continent on Earth — including now-frigid Antarctica. 

The researchers know the bone belonged to a type of sauropod, though they aren't sure of the genus. Here in this illustration, a sauropod called Brontomerus protects her baby from a predator [Credit: Francisco Gascó under the direction of Mike Taylor and Matt Wedel]
The discovery of a single sauropod vertebra on James Ross Island in Antarctica reveals that these behemoths, which included Diplodocus, Brachiosaurus and Apatosaurus, lived on the continent in the upper Cretaceous Period about 100 million years ago. 

"Sauropods were found all around the world, except Antarctica," said study researcher Ariana Paulina Carabajal, a paleontologist at the Carmen Funes Municipal Museum in Plaza Huincul, Argentina. "Until now."  

Paulina Carabajal reported the find Nov. 3 here at the annual meeting of the Society for Vertebrate Paleontology. 

Fossils at the South Pole 

Paulina Carabajal and her colleagues aren't the first to find a dinosaur in Antarctica. Paleontologists turned up an ankylosaur bone in 1986, and since then, there have been other dinosaur specimens, including duck-billed dinosaurs. Nonetheless, the continent hasn't been as fertile a fossil-hunting ground as other regions.  

"There are probably a lot of dinosaurs in Antarctica, but we haven't found them yet, because it's very difficult to go to Antarctica and then it's very difficult to find [fossils]," Paulina Carabajal told LiveScience. "And, of course, a lot of the continent is covered in ice." 

Even in the summer, when ice and snow retreat in some coastal areas, finding fossils is difficult, she said. Daily cycles of freezing and thawing crack bones to pieces, so "you will never find a complete bone," Paulina Carabajal said. And after about 8 inches (20 centimeters) of digging, you run into the permafrost, which is too hard to excavate without waiting for it to melt for a day or two. 

Paulina Carabajal and two colleagues flew to James Ross Island by helicopter, which dropped them off with their camping equipment. 

"When the helicopter leaves you there just with boxes and goes back to the base … you feel like ‘Ooh, what am I doing here?’" Paulina Carabajal said. 

But she soon fell in love with the peaceful, chilly island, she said, and the group began surveying for fossils. They found a number of marine reptiles, fish and invertebrates, Paulina Carabajal said, but no dinosaurs until the end of their stay, when they went to the site where the first Antarctic ankylosaur was found. There, at the surface, they found a single broken sauropod vertebra. 

"We cannot do much with only a vertebra, so we don't know the genera or species," Paulina Carabajal said. "But we know it's a titanosaur, it's a kind of sauropod that's very common in South America." 

Long-tailed, long-necked titanosaurs may have weighed more than 100 tons. They were herbivores, armored with tough, beadlike scales. 

Ancient Antarctica 

When the sauropods roamed the Earth, Antarctica was connected to South America and Australia, so sauropods could have simply walked from present-day continent to present-day continent, Paulina Carabajal said. The landmass of Antarctica itself was not as far south as it is today, so the continent would have been warmer, she said, although far from balmy. 

"It was warm enough for these animals to live there," she said. 

Beyond showing these long-necks lumbered across every continent, the find may be useful for revealing where and how the animals traveled, Paulina Carabajal said. No one yet knows how sauropods spread across the globe. 

"It will be interesting, with time, with more information, to know how these dinosaurs spread around the world using Antarctica like a bridge," she said. 

Author: Stephanie Pappas | Source: LiveScience [November 04, 2011]
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