Cosmos

ODD JOBS: PALEODERMA­TOLOGIST

Looking skin deep can provide new discoverie­s, at least in this vanguard field of research.

- – DEBORAH DEVIS

There isn’t a lot of dinosaur skin surviving from the past, and even fewer specialist­s examining it.

ALL MANNER OF UNUSUAL JOBS EXIST in science, but perhaps one of the most remarkable is the expertise of Phil Bell, of the University of New England.

Bell is a dinosaur-skin specialist. It’s a field so niche that he’s the only person in Australia who can claim the title. This specialisa­tion doesn’t even have a name, although Bell suggests “palaeoderm­atologist”.

What draws somebody to such a distinctiv­e topic? “When I was visiting museums in Canada I found drawers full of dinosaur skin that nobody had looked at for 100 years and realised how unusual they were,” he says. “That really captured my imaginatio­n, so I sort of just fell into it.”

While many of us think of palaeontol­ogy as a study of bones and fossils, Bell sees a beauty in the finer, and more fragile, parts of dinosaurs. “There has been a dismissive attitude towards skin,” he says. “Everyone is interested in the bones.”

These days when we think of dinosaur skin, we often think about feathers. Feathered dinosaurs catch the imaginatio­n as an audacious and glamorous vision of long-extinct animal types. It’s a beautiful picture, but it doesn’t represent most dinosaurs.

“The reality is that only a small proportion had feathers – the majority had scaly skin,” says Bell. It’s a fact he finds far from discouragi­ng. “There has been an assumption that dinosaurs are just big scaly reptiles. But scales are complex, and do fascinatin­g things that help them interact with their environmen­t.”

Much is lost when we only consider what lies beneath the surface. Skin can reveal minute adaptation­s that explain a lot about dinosaurs’ environmen­ts and how they were suited to it. With skin, “you give yourself a whole new way of investigat­ing their way of life,” Bell says.

Take modern animals as an example. The tooth-like structures that cover a shark’s body help with streamline­d swimming, so we can infer that another creature with similar skin may live underwater. Likewise, human skin changes in thickness and stretchine­ss depending on where it is on the body, to accommodat­e how we use those different parts. If the skin on the fingertips of one hand is tougher, it’s possible to infer that the hand belongs to a guitarist, or someone who uses tools regularly.

In the same way, dinosaur skin can reveal how that creature interacted with its environmen­t and the climate in which

it lived. One of Bell’s highlights concerned a mummified hadrosaur from Canada, the exquisitel­y preserved skin of which included a fleshy head crest. This rare discovery allowed scientists to paint a more accurate picture of what the hadrosaur looked like and how it may have visually communicat­ed with its kin.

Much of a dinosaur skin specialist’s day is spent “reading and writing and looking through images of dinosaur skin I have collected or have been sent to me by colleagues,” says Bell.

Bell also supervises students, lectures, and conducts fieldwork across Canada and in Lightning Ridge, in north-western New South Wales, where he uncovers new fragments of skin, bone and fossil.

It’s not an easy field. Skin is fragile and often overlooked, which means it only has a very short history when it comes to scientific research. “Until very recently, there was literally no dinosaur fossil skin found in Australia,” Bell says.

Its fragility – and a dismissive attitude towards it – has meant skin is often either lost or damaged before it even has the chance to reach Bell, who says one of the hardest things about dinosaur skin is how difficult it is to recover.

“There is [often] not a huge amount of skin left, or it is damaged during excavation,” he says. “Sometimes it has been removed from the bone so the original placement is lost.”

Dinosaur research has already been greatly changed by new technologi­es, and Bell believes this will be no different in his nascent field. In fact, many tried and true palaeontol­ogy technologi­es are yet to be utilised in dinosaur skin science. “Even some of the most commonly used practices have never been applied to the study of skin,” says Bell. “That is something I am trying to change.”

He uses common techniques such as microct scanning and histology slides to study the microscopi­c structures of dinosaur skin, in combinatio­n with powerful chemical analysis. This reveals those subtle and minute adaptation­s that elude the naked eye.

Ultimately, it’s the potential for more work and more understand­ing that explains why Bell chose such a particular field. “I just enjoy the novelty of doing something other people haven’t done. Palaeontol­ogy is an old field that focused on bones. This is a chance to start from scratch.”

“There has been a dismissive attitude towards skin,” says Bell. “Everyone is interested in the bones.”

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 ??  ?? The intricatel­y patterned skins (opposite centre) of some hadrosaurs – duck-billed dinosaurs – are often all experts such as
Phil Bell (above right) can use to distinguis­h species. Examinatio­n of the skin specimen of a Saurolophu­s (left) revealed a striped tail dotted with larger studs and blunt spines down the centre of the back and tail. Although Edmontosau­rus (right) had been known for over a century, a “mummified” skeleton discovered in 2014 revealed it had a soft, fleshy, rooster-like crest.
The intricatel­y patterned skins (opposite centre) of some hadrosaurs – duck-billed dinosaurs – are often all experts such as Phil Bell (above right) can use to distinguis­h species. Examinatio­n of the skin specimen of a Saurolophu­s (left) revealed a striped tail dotted with larger studs and blunt spines down the centre of the back and tail. Although Edmontosau­rus (right) had been known for over a century, a “mummified” skeleton discovered in 2014 revealed it had a soft, fleshy, rooster-like crest.
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