
| Two 190-million-year-old dinosaur embryos, out of a group of seven eggs, have been identified as the world?s oldest dinosaur embryos found to date. Discovered in South Africa, they are also the oldest known embryos for any terrestrial vertebrate from anywhere in the world.
The embryos are of an Early Jurassic prosauropod dinosaur according to Dr Mike R th, from the Wits Bernard Price Institute for Palaeontological Research (BPI). R th is one of five authors who describe the embryos and their evolutionary significance in the leading international journal Science published on July 29, 2005. ?The embryos belong to the early sauropodomorph dinosaur Massospondylus carinatus. These skeletons are quite common in South Africa and range in size from small juveniles to full adults, up to about 5m in length. This identification is a major coup, because embryos are often difficult to identify to species,? says R th.
The embryos provide significant insights into the growth and development of this early dinosaur. R th explains that this discovery allowed the team to reconstruct in detail the growth trajectory of Massospondylus, from pre-hatchling to full adult - a first for any dinosaur. Prof Reisz, the project leader, points out that adults and juveniles of other types of dinosaur are known, but they are usually either recovered from bone beds, where the skeletons are broken up, disarticulated and scattered, or the rare articulated skeletons are not sufficient to reflect a growth series.
The result is an adult animal that looked very different from the embryo and was probably at least partly bipedal. In other cases where embryos and adults are known, as in the hadrosaurs or duck-billed dinosaurs, such dramatic changes in body proportions are not shown. The embryos also provide clues about the origin of the quadrupedal gait of the giant sauropods (the ?brontosaurs?) of later times, which are descendants of the prosauropods. The embryo of Massospondylus looks like a tiny sauropod with massive limbs and a quadrupedal gait, which the authors believe shows that the quadrupedal gait of sauropods probably evolved through a phenomenon called paedomorphosis - the retention of embryonic and juvenile features in the adult. ?Some people think that humans too are products of paedomorphosis,? says R th. The absence of well developed teeth in the two preserved embryos, which were clearly on the point of hatching, and the overall awkward body proportions suggest that the hatchlings required parental care of some kind for some time after emerging from the egg. The authors say that if this interpretation is correct, it constitutes the oldest known indication of parental care in the fossil record. For more information, contact: or to find out answers to more questions on embryos of an early Jurassic prosauropod dinosaur, click here. |