They find perfectly preserved dinosaur embryo that was preparing to be born

Baptized as ‘baby Yingliang’, it was discovered in Ganzhou, southern China, and belongs to a theropod dinosaur without teeth, or oviraptosaurus.

Washington (AFP) .- Scientists announced on Tuesday the discovery of a perfectly preserved dinosaur embryo, which dates back at least 66 million years and was preparing to hatch from its egg.

The fossil was discovered in Ganzhou, southern China, and belongs to a theropod dinosaur without teeth, or oviraptosaurus, which the researchers dubbed “baby Yingliang.”

“It is one of the best dinosaur embryos ever found”University of Birmingham researcher Fion Waisum Ma, co-author of the publication in the journal iScience, told AFP.

Ma and his colleagues found the embryo with its head positioned below its body, its feet on either side, and its back hunched, a posture not previously seen in dinosaurs but similar to modern birds.

In birds, this behavior is controlled by the central nervous system and is called “folding.” Chickens preparing to hatch place their heads under their right wing to keep it stable as they hatch with their beaks.

Embryos that do not achieve this position have a greater chance of dying from a failed hatch. “This indicates that such behavior in modern birds first evolved among their dinosaur ancestors,” Ma said.

An alternative to that folding could be something similar to what modern crocodiles do, taking a position as if they are sitting with their head tilted towards the chest to hatch.

Decades in a warehouse

Los oviraptorosaurios, or “long egg thieves”, were feathered dinosaurs that lived in what is now Asia and North America during the Upper Cretaceous period.

They had various types of beaks and diets, and their size ranged from that of a modern turkey to that of the enormous Gigantoraptor, eight meters long.

El “bebé Yingliang” It is about 27 centimeters long from head to tail and is found inside a 17-centimeter egg en el Yingliang Stone Nature History Museum.

Researchers believe that the creature is 66 to 72 million years oldIt was probably preserved when the egg was buried as a result of an avalanche, which protected it from scavengers for so long.

It would have grown to two or three meters in length had it become an adult, and would probably have fed on plants.

The specimen is one of several egg fossils that have been left behind in a deposit for decades.

The research team suspected they might contain unborn dinosaurs and scraped off part of the egg to discover the embryo inside.

“This dinosaur embryo inside this egg It is one of the most beautiful fossils I have ever seen.”Professor Steve Brusatte, from the University of Edinburgh and part of the research team, said in a statement.

“This little dinosaur in its prenatal state looks a lot like a baby bird hunched over in its egg, which provides further evidence that many of the characteristics of today’s birds evolved from their dinosaur ancestors”He continued.

The team hopes to study “baby Yingliang” in more detail through advanced scanning techniques, to map his entire skeleton, including the bones of his skull, because part of his body is still covered by rock.

You may also like

Immediate Access Pro