April 14, 2005

Pregnant dinosaur fossil

What a time to be a palaeontologist!

The first dinosaur eggs found complete with shells in the body of the mother has solved the long-standing mystery of how dinosaurs laid their eggs. The evidence shows they laid a clutch in a series of sittings, like birds, rather than all at once like crocodiles and other living reptiles.

The pair of eggs come from a fossil found in the Jiangxi province of China which includes the pelvis and part of a leg of an oviraptor - a two-legged dinosaur that roamed between 100 and 65 million years ago.

From New Scientist.

Posted by David on April 14, 2005 9:20 PM

Comments

She died just as she was going to lay her eggs. Kind of sad. Empathy for a 100 million-year-old fossilized dinosaur.

Posted by: Sarah Author Profile Page on April 15, 2005 6:26 PM
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