The Freeman

Were dinosaurs warm-blooded?

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PARIS — A new method to chemically analyse dinosaur egg shells has allowed scientists to gauge the extinct lizards’ body temperatur­e, researcher­s said on Tuesday.

The findings support recent work by other teams that dinosaurs were neither warm- nor coldbloode­d, but somewhere in between, researcher­s wrote in the journal Nature Communicat­ions.

But it also indicated that body temperatur­e differed between dinosaur species.

“The temperatur­es we measured suggest that at least some dinosaurs were not fully endotherms (warm-blooded) like modern birds,” said the study’s lead author Robert Eagle of the University of California Los Angeles (UCLA).

“They may have been intermedia­te — somewhere between modern alligators and crocodiles and modern birds.”

This meant they could produce heat internally and raise their body temperatur­e, but not maintain it at a consistent­ly high level.

Warm-blooded animals, or endotherms, typically maintain a constant body temperatur­e while cold-blooded ones, called ectotherms, rely on external heat sources to warm up — like lizards lazing in the Sun.

Scientists have been debating for 150 years whether dinosaurs were warm-blooded hunters, like mammals, or coldbloode­d and sluggish like many reptiles.

“If dinosaurs were at least endothermi­c (warmbloode­d) to a degree, they had more capacity to run around searching for food than an alligator would,” Eagle said.

Warm-blooded animals typically need to eat a great deal to stay warm, forcing them into frequent hunts or to eat large quantities of plants.

The team said it used a pioneering procedure to measure the internal temperatur­e of dinosaur mothers which lived some 71-80 million years ago.

They examined the chemical makeup of the shells of 19 fossilised eggs from two types of dinosaur, unearthed in Argentina and Mongolia’s Gobi desert.

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