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- <text id=94TT1556>
- <title>
- Nov. 14, 1994: Science:Cretaceous Parenting
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1994
- Nov. 14, 1994 How Could She Do It?
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SCIENCE, Page 78
- Cretaceous Parenting
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p> A fossil embryo and a nestful of eggs suggest that even the
- fiercest dinosaurs had a domestic streak
- </p>
- <p>By Michael D. Lemonick--Reported by Andrea Dorfman/New York
- </p>
- <p> Anyone who shuddered through Jurassic Park would never use the
- words motherly or nurturing to describe the movie's prehistoric
- villains--especially not the vicious velociraptors and Tyrannosaurus
- rex that slashed their way across the screen. But those beasts
- may have had a softer side that moviegoers never saw.
- </p>
- <p> In recent years, scientists have come to believe that on the
- evolutionary tree, dinosaurs are more closely linked to robins
- and sparrows than to lizards and crocodiles. Even the most ferocious
- dinosaurs may have been tender, caring parents, hovering like
- mother birds over their nests of hatchlings.
- </p>
- <p> For many years the evidence of such motherly love applied only
- to peaceful, plant-eating dinosaurs. Now a dramatic discovery
- announced in the current Science suggests that the carnivores
- had a nesting instinct as well. Working with a U.S.-Mongolian
- team in the remote Gobi Desert, paleontologist Mark Norell of
- New York City's American Museum of Natural History found the
- nearly complete skeleton of a predatory-dinosaur embryo, the
- first ever discovered, fossilized just as it was about to hatch
- during the Cretaceous period, more than 70 million years ago.
- The embryo and its potato-size egg, found in a rocky nest along
- with at least eight other eggs, are from a kind of oviraptor,
- an ostrich-size cousin of both tyrannosaurs and velociraptors.
- And several aspects of the discovery make the parallels between
- dinosaurs and birds stronger than ever.
- </p>
- <p> To start with, says Norell, the eggs he found are identical
- to eggs uncovered in 1923, also in the Gobi, by the famed fossil
- hunter Roy Chapman Andrews. Most of the bones in the area Andrews
- explored belonged to a vegetarian dinosaur called Protoceratops,
- so Andrews thought the eggs did too. Since a predator's remains
- were found lying on top of one clutch of eggs, scientists assumed
- that it had died in the act of eating them and named it Oviraptor,
- or egg stealer. But Norell's discovery makes it clear that the
- unfairly maligned "thief" was more likely a mother dinosaur
- incubating its own eggs.
- </p>
- <p> Another clue to the monster's motherly instincts may come from
- two tiny skulls that Norell found in the nest. They belong to
- a different type of predatory dinosaur known as dromaeosaurs.
- While they could have been egg stealers themselves, they could
- also have been brought in by the mother oviraptor as food. Or
- they might have emerged from eggs sneaked into the nest by a
- mother dromaeosaur so her young could be raised by unsuspecting
- surrogate parents--a strategy used by modern cuckoos.
- </p>
- <p> Even if there had been no other fossils in the nest, the discovery
- of an embryonic oviraptor would have been important. Dinosaur
- embryos are rare--fewer than a dozen kinds have ever been
- found. Juvenile animals often have features that vanish as the
- creatures grow, but which also exist in the embryos of their
- precursors or descendants (human fetuses, for example, start
- out with tiny tails). If researchers can find common traits
- in unhatched dinosaurs and birds, they will be able to establish
- stronger links between them.
- </p>
- <p> Norell is planning a return next summer to the Gobi, where there
- are undoubtedly more surprises awaiting. Jurassic Park 2 may
- have to take into account the mounting evidence that Tyrannosaurus
- and its kin resembled nesting robins--albeit big robins with
- sharp teeth and really bad tempers.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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