The Free Press Journal

Dinos may have regulated their own body temperatur­es

- AGENCIES /

Dinosaurs may have evolved from lizardlike cold-blooded characteri­stics to warm-blooded traits, eventually regulating body temperatur­es with their own metabolism as opposed to relying on the sun’s heat for warmth, according to a first-of-itskind study. The research, published in the journal Science Advances, analysed chemical bonds in the compound calcium carbonate — which is present in dinosaur egg shells — to calculate the temperatur­e at which these minerals formed, and also the body temperatur­e of the mother who laid the egg.

Applying this method to fossil eggs from three distinct dinosaur species ranging in history from the time of evolution of the first reptiles to that of the early birds, the scientists found that the body temperatur­e of dinosaurs may have ranged from 35-40 degrees Celsius.

“The global climate during the dinosaur era was significan­tly warmer than it is today. For this reason, measuring only the body temperatur­es of dinosaurs who lived near the equator wouldn't tell us whether they were endo- or exothermic because their body temperatur­e may simply have been a cold-blooded response to the hot climates they lived in,” said study co-author Hagit Affek from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem in Israel.

In order to ensure that the body temperatur­es estimated by the scientists were the result of an internal, metabolic heating process, and not reflecting the climate around the dinosaurs, Affek and her team focused on the ancient reptiles that lived in high latitudes like Alberta in Canada. By studying mollusc shells that lived alongside the dinosaurs in Alberta, the researcher­s determined the ambient climate of the time.

This was because these shelled creatures depended on the environmen­t for regulating their body temperatur­e, the study noted. The mollusks’ body temperatur­e measured 26 degree Celsius, revealing that the dinosaurs living in Alberta regulated their own body heat — since they may not have maintained a temperatur­e of 35-40 degree Celsius in such an environmen­t otherwise, the scientists explained.

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