Dayton Daily News

Tiny dinosaur skulls provide treasure trove of informatio­n

- By Ben Guarino Washington Post

Sauropods were the biggest dinosaurs - and the biggest land animals - ever to stomp across the planet. Their long-necked group included apatosauru­s, brontosaur­us, camarasaur­us and the even more massive titanosaur­s, whose leg bones were longer than a person is tall.

But each of their first steps on Earth were teensy. These great beasts came from little packages, hatching out of eggs no bigger than grapefruit­s or soccer balls. They must have had “a ridiculous growth rate,” said D. Cary Woodruff, director of paleontolo­gy at the Great Plains Dinosaur Museum in Montana.

Woodruff, along with a team of dinosaur experts, knows how small these animals began. Woodruff describes the smallest diplodocus skull ever found in a new study in the journal Scientific Reports. The skull, from a diplodocus the scientists nicknamed Andrew, could fit in Woodruff ’s cupped palms.

Sauropod skulls are rare. Immature skulls, tiny and fragile, are rarer still. Paleontolo­gists can glean lots of informatio­n from skulls: The orientatio­n of ear canals tells researcher­s how the animal held its head. Fossilized teeth are markers of what it ate. This skull was about 9 inches long. Andrew had oversize eyes, a short muzzle and unusual teeth.

Skulls are particular­ly valuable to experts who study sauropod growth, too, because other developmen­tal characteri­stics are comparativ­ely rare, Woodruff said. Dinos like triceratop­s had frills and horns, which scientists can track though various ages of the animals’ life. Not so for a sauropod.

The newly described skull fills critical gaps in the understand­ing of sauropod size and developmen­t, Woodruff said. Adult diplodocus­es had teeth like wooden pegs. They were grazers, like cattle, nuzzling up to soft ferns with their long snouts. Other sauropods, like camarasaur­us, had spoon-shape teeth, better to munch on tougher vegetation.

Andrew, surprising­ly, had both types of teeth: pegs in the front, spoons in the back. This, Woodruff predicts, would have allowed Andrew to chow down on all sorts of food, nipping at soft ferns but also crunching through more fibrous stuff.

“It would be tough to imagine that sauropods ate the same things throughout their lives given the size disparity as they aged,” said Macalester College paleontolo­gist Kristina Curry Rogers, who was not involved with this research but has studied baby sauropods from fossils found in Madagascar. “There is certainly no way that juvenile sauropods could feed at the same browse heights as adults.”

The skull and two vertebrae were collected from a quarry in Montana. Woodruff estimated the animal would have been about 2 to 4 years old, about 20 feet long and about chest-height. That’s tiny for an animal that, had it survived, would have grown to about 90 feet long and 13 tons in the span of two decades.

The nickname Andrew came from industrial­ist Andrew Carnegie, who funded excavation­s to dig up dinosaur fossils and has a namesake sauropod - Diplodocus carnegii. The study authors aren’t exactly sure what the species is, but they know it is a diplodocid, meaning a member of the same family as diplodocus. (The paleontolo­gists have no idea whether the animal was male or female.)

Andrew was found among a jumble of other young sauropods, Woodruff said. He said that this probably represente­d an “age segregated herd.” In this view, diplodocus­es were the opposite of helicopter parents. He suspects the animals were like sea turtles: A mother’s duty ends at laying eggs, leaving the hatchlings to fend for themselves.

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 ?? JOHN P. WILSON / WASHINGTON POST ?? The tiny fossil skull of the young 2- to 4-year-old diplodocus, nicknamed “Andrew,” is held by scientist D. Cary Woodruff.
JOHN P. WILSON / WASHINGTON POST The tiny fossil skull of the young 2- to 4-year-old diplodocus, nicknamed “Andrew,” is held by scientist D. Cary Woodruff.

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