The Star Malaysia

Perfectly preserved dinosaur embryo found

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Washington: Scientists have announced the discovery of an exquisitel­y preserved dinosaur embryo (pic) from at least 66 million years ago that was preparing to hatch from its egg just like a chicken.

The fossil was discovered in Ganzhou, southern China and belonged to a toothless theropod dinosaur, or oviraptoro­saur, which the researcher­s dubbed “Baby Yingliang".

“It is one of the best dinosaur embryos ever found in history,” University of Birmingham researcher Fion Waisum Ma, who co-authored a paper in the journal iscience, said.

Ma and colleagues found that Baby Yingliang’s head lay below its body, with the feet on either side and back curled – a posture that was previously unseen in dinosaurs, but similar to modern birds.

In birds, the behaviour is controlled by the central nervous system and called “tucking”. Chicks preparing to hatch tuck their head under their right wing in order to stabilise the head while they crack the shell with their beak.

Embryos that fail to tuck have a higher chance of death from an unsuccessf­ul hatching.

“This indicates that such behaviour in modern birds first evolved and originated among their dinosaur ancestors,” said Ma.

An alternativ­e to tucking might have been something closer to what is seen in modern crocodiles, which instead assume a sitting posture with the head bending upon the chest up to hatching.

Oviraptoro­saurs, which means “egg thief lizards", were feathered dinosaurs that lived in what is now Asia and North America during the Late Cretaceous period.

Baby Yingliang measures around 27cm long from head to tail, and lies inside a 17cm-long egg at the Yingliang Stone Nature History Museum.

The specimen was one of several egg fossils that were forgotten in storage for decades.

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