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[dinosaur] Baby ornithopod fossils from high latitudes of Cretaceous Australia (free pdf)




Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com

A new paper with free pdf:

Justin L. Kitchener, NicolÃs E. Campione, Elizabeth T. Smith & Phil R. Bell (2019)
High-latitude neonate and perinate ornithopods from the mid-Cretaceous of southeastern Australia.
Scientific Reports 9, Article number: 19600
doi: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-019-56069-8
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-56069-8

Free pdf:
https://www.nature.com/articles/s41598-019-56069-8.pdf


Dinosaurs were remarkably climate-tolerant, thriving from equatorial to polar latitudes. High-paleolatitude eggshells and hatchling material from the Northern Hemisphere confirms that hadrosaurid ornithopods reproduced in polar regions. Similar examples are lacking from Gondwanan landmasses. Here we describe two non-iguanodontian ornithopod femora from the Griman Creek Formation (Cenomanian) in New South Wales, Australia. These incomplete proximal femora represent the first perinatal ornithopods described from Australia, supplementing neonatal and slightly older âyearlingâ specimens from the AptianâAlbian Eumeralla and Wonthaggi formations in Victoria. While pseudomorphic preservation obviates histological examination, anatomical and size comparisons with Victorian specimens, which underwent previous histological work, support perinatal interpretations for the Griman Creek Formation femora. Estimated femoral lengths (37âmm and 45âmm) and body masses (113â191âg and 140â236âg), together with the limited development of features in the smallest femur, suggest a possible embryonic state. Low body masses (<1âkg for âyearlingsâ and ~20âkg at maturity) would have precluded small ornithopods from long-distance migration, even as adults, in the Griman Creek, Eumeralla, and Wonthaggi formations. Consequently, these specimens support high-latitudinal breeding in a non-iguanodontian ornithopod in eastern Gondwana during the early Late Cretaceous.

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News:

https://phys.org/news/2019-12-baby-dinosaurs-australia.html

https://cosmosmagazine.com/palaeontology/tiny-fossils-are-first-known-baby-dinosaurs-from-australia