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[dinosaur] Small theropod eggs from Lower Cretaceous Ohyamashimo Formation of Japan




Ben Creisler
bcreisler@gmail.com

A new paper:

Himeoolithus murakamii oogen. et oosp. nov.
Subtiliolithus hyogoensis oosp. nov. Â


Kohei Tanaka, Darla K. Zelenitsky, FranÃois Therrien, Tadahiro Ikeda, Katsuhiro Kubota, Haruo Saegusa, Tomonori Tanaka & Kenji Ikuno (2020)
Exceptionally small theropod eggs from the Lower Cretaceous Ohyamashimo Formation of Tamba, Hyogo Prefecture, Japan.
Cretaceous Research 104519 (advance online publication)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cretres.2020.104519
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0195667120302056


Highlights

We describe eggs and eggshells of four ootaxa, all of which likely belonged to small theropods, from new horizons of a fossil egg locality in Hyogo Prefecture, southwestern Japan.

Himeoolithus murakamii oogen. et oosp. nov. and Subtiliolithus hyogoensis oosp. nov. were erected as new ootaxa.

The discovery of additional eggshells from this locality indicates that various small theropods were nesting in the Hyogo area in the Early Cretaceous, even though these dinosaurs are poorly represented by skeletal remains.
This locality has amongst the highest diversity of eggshells from Lower Cretaceous fossil egg sites known worldwide.

Abstract

The Kamitaki Locality in the Albian Ohyamashimo Formation in the eastern Hyogo Prefecture of southwestern Japan is among the richest Lower Cretaceous fossil egg sites in the world. So far, eggshells of five different ootaxa, one ornithopod and four theropods, have been identified from the Kamitaki Bonebed Quarry. Although previous discoveries of egg remains were limited to isolated eggshell fragments, here we report on the discovery of a nearly complete egg, several partial eggs, as well as numerous eggshell fragments from horizons of the newly excavated Kamitaki Egg Quarry that are 5.5-6.75 meters above the Kamitaki Bonebed Quarry. Taphonomical investigations indicate that the new site preserves the remnants of an in-situ nest of Himeoolithus murakamii oogen. et oosp. nov., mixed with scattered and isolated eggshell fragments of other non-avian theropod ootaxa, including Nipponoolithus ramosus, Prismatoolithus sp., and Subtiliolithus hyogoensis oosp. nov., The most abundant ootaxon at the quarry, Himeoolithus, is represented by four eggs and over 1300 scattered eggshell fragments. Himeoolithus is the smallest non-avian theropod egg known to date (9.9 g in estimated mass) and exhibits an unusually elongated shape (length: width ratio of 2.25) for such as small egg. The presence of six dinosaur ootaxa from the two quarries at the Kamitaki Locality reveals a hidden diversity of small dinosaurs, particularly non-avian theropods, in the Hyogo region and indicates the area was utilized for nesting by various small dinosaur species at the end of the Early Cretaceous.

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