Monday, November 25

They find a perfectly preserved dinosaur embryo in China

A group of scientists discovered a perfectly preserved dinosaur embryo that was preparing to be born, just like animals such as chickens do.

It was discovered in Ganzhou, a city south of China, and researchers estimate it has at least 66 millions of years.

It is believed to be from a toothless theropod dinosaur or an ovirraptosaurus. Experts have called it Baby Yingliang.

Fion Waisum Ma, one of the scientists associated with the discovery, said it is “the best dinosaur embryo ever found.”

The discovery has also given researchers a greater understanding of the link between dinosaurs and modern birds. The fossil shows that the embryo was in a coiled position known as “folding”, which is a behavior seen in birds shortly before they hatch.

“This indicates that such behavior in modern birds evolved and originated for the first time among their dinosaur ancestors” , Ma told AFP news agency.

This is part of an embryo’s coordinated dance to prepare itself to break through its egg and enter the world. Tucking is essential for a successful hatch. (art here by Shoulin). pic.twitter.com/iHalzJ1ClH

– Steve Brusatte (@SteveBrusatte) December 17, 2021

Ovirraptorosaurs, which means “egg-thieving lizards,” were feathered dinosaurs that lived in what is now Asia and North America during the late Cretaceous period, between about 100 to 66 millions of years.

Paleontologist Steve Brusatte, who was also part of the research team, tweeted that it was “one of the most impressive dinosaur fossils” he had ever seen and that the embryo was about to hatch.

Baby Yingliang measures 27 cm long from head to tail and rests inside an egg of 17 cm long found in the Yingliang Stone Museum of Natural History in China.

The egg was discovered in 2000, but was stored for 10 years.

It was only when construction work began at the museum and ancient fossils were classified, that researchers turned their attention to the egg, from the which they suspected contained an embryo inside.

Part of the dinosaur’s body is still covered by rocks and the researchers will use advanced scanning techniques to create an image of its complete skeleton. 2

Artists impression of the dinosaur in the egg all curled up
Drawing of a dinosaur embryo in an egg.


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