PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

World's oldest dinosaur embryo bonebed yields organic remains

2013-04-11
(Press-News.org) The great age of the embryos is unusual because almost all known dinosaur embryos are from the Cretaceous Period. The Cretaceous ended some 125 million years after the bones at the Lufeng site were buried and fossilized.

Led by University of Toronto Mississauga paleontologist Robert Reisz, an international team of scientists from Canada, Taiwan, the People's Republic of China, Australia, and Germany excavated and analyzed over 200 bones from individuals at different stages of embryonic development.

"We are opening a new window into the lives of dinosaurs," says Reisz. "This is the first time we've been able to track the growth of embryonic dinosaurs as they developed. Our findings will have a major impact on our understanding of the biology of these animals."

The bones represent about 20 embryonic individuals of the long-necked sauropodomorph Lufengosaurus, the most common dinosaur in the region during the Early Jurassic period. An adult Lufengosaurus was approximately eight metres long.

The disarticulated bones probably came from several nests containing dinosaurs at various embryonic stages, giving Reisz's team the rare opportunity to study ongoing growth patterns. Dinosaur embryos are more commonly found in single nests or partial nests, which offer only a snapshot of one developmental stage.

To investigate the dinosaurs' development, the team concentrated on the largest embryonic bone, the femur. This bone showed a consistently rapid growth rate, doubling in length from 12 to 24 mm as the dinosaurs grew inside their eggs. Reisz says this very fast growth may indicate that sauropodomorphs like Lufengosaurus had a short incubation period.

VIDEO: These are animations showing the locality on Google Map, in Yunnan Province, Southwest China; Locality photo from a distance, from close up showing part of the field crew; close up...
Click here for more information.

Reisz's team found the femurs were being reshaped even as they were in the egg. Examination of the bones' anatomy and internal structure showed that as they contracted and pulled on the hard bone tissue, the dinosaurs' muscles played an active role in changing the shape of the developing femur. "This suggests that dinosaurs, like modern birds, moved around inside their eggs," says Reisz. "It represents the first evidence of such movement in a dinosaur."

The Taiwanese members of the team also discovered organic material inside the embryonic bones. Using precisely targeted infrared spectroscopy, they conducted chemical analyses of the dinosaur bone and found evidence of what Reisz says may be collagen fibres. Collagen is a protein characteristically found in bone.

"The bones of ancient animals are transformed to rock during the fossilization process," says Reisz. "To find remnants of proteins in the embryos is really remarkable, particularly since these specimens are over 100 million years older than other fossils containing similar organic material."

Only about one square metre of the bonebed has been excavated to date, but this small area also yielded pieces of eggshell, the oldest known for any terrestrial vertebrate. Reisz says this is the first time that even fragments of such delicate dinosaur eggshells, less than 100 microns thick, have been found in good condition.

"A find such as the Lufeng bonebed is extraordinarily rare in the fossil record, and is valuable for both its great age and the opportunity it offers to study dinosaur embryology," says Reisz. "It greatly enhances our knowledge of how these remarkable animals from the beginning of the Age of Dinosaurs grew."



INFORMATION:

The research is published in the April 11 issue of Nature.

MEDIA CONTACTS

Robert Reisz
Department of Biology
University of Toronto Mississauga
Office: 905-828-3981
Cell (for media distribution only): 647-830-5364
robert.reisz@utoronto.ca

Nicolle Wahl
U of T Mississauga Communications
905-569-4656
nicolle.wahl@utoronto.ca



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Exciting breakthrough in search for neurodegenerative disease treatments

2013-04-11
A significant breakthrough has been made by scientists at The University of Manchester towards developing an effective treatment for neurodegenerative diseases such as Huntington's, Alzheimer's and Parkinson's. Researchers at the Manchester Institute of Biotechnology have detailed how an enzyme in the brain interacts with an exciting drug-like lead compound for Huntington's Disease to inhibit its activity. Their findings demonstrate that it can be developed as an effective treatment for neurodegenerative diseases. The research is published in the journal Nature. Working ...

Need your appendix out? How about scarless surgery through the navel

2013-04-11
A new study suggests that surgery for appendicitis that uses a pinhole incision through the navel may be a feasible alternative to traditional appendectomies. Published early online in the British Journal of Surgery, the findings indicate that larger studies to test the potential of the procedure are warranted. An experimental, minimally invasive, and scarless surgical procedure for appendicitis called transgastric appendicectomy avoids the use of external incisions and causes less pain than traditional appendectomies. Through the insertion of a needle, an endoscope is ...

Fat-free see-through brain bares all

2013-04-11
VIDEO: CLARITY provided this 3D view showing a thick slice of a mouse brain's memory hub, or hippocampus. It reveals a few different types of cells: Projecting neurons (green), connecting interneurons... Click here for more information. Slicing optional. Scientists can now study the brain's finer workings, while preserving its 3-D structure and integrity of its circuitry and other biological machinery. A breakthrough method, called CLARITY, developed by National Institutes ...

Getting CLARITY: Hydrogel process developed at Stanford creates transparent brain

2013-04-11
STANFORD, Calif. — Combining neuroscience and chemical engineering, researchers at Stanford University have developed a process that renders a mouse brain transparent. The postmortem brain remains whole — not sliced or sectioned in any way — with its three-dimensional complexity of fine wiring and molecular structures completely intact and able to be measured and probed at will with visible light and chemicals. The process, called CLARITY, ushers in an entirely new era of whole-organ imaging that stands to fundamentally change our scientific understanding of the most-important-but-least-understood ...

Stanford study shows different brains have similar responses to music

2013-04-11
STANFORD, Calif. — Do the brains of different people listening to the same piece of music actually respond in the same way? An imaging study by Stanford University School of Medicine scientists says the answer is yes, which may in part explain why music plays such a big role in our social existence. The investigators used functional magnetic resonance imaging to identify a distributed network of several brain structures whose activity levels waxed and waned in a strikingly similar pattern among study participants as they listened to classical music they'd never heard ...

Pottery reveals Ice Age hunter-gatherers' taste for fish

2013-04-11
Hunter-gatherers living in glacial conditions produced pots for cooking fish, according to the findings of a pioneering new study led by the University of York which reports the earliest direct evidence for the use of ceramic vessels. Scientists from the UK, the Netherlands, Sweden and Japan carried out chemical analysis of food residues in pottery up to 15,000 years old from the late glacial period, the oldest pottery so far investigated. It is the first study to directly address the often posed question "why humans made pots?" The research is published in Nature. The ...

Mining information contained in clinical notes could yield early signs of harmful drug reactions

2013-04-11
STANFORD, Calif. — Mining the records of routine interactions between patients and their care providers can detect drug side effects a couple of years before an official alert from the U.S. Food and Drug Administration, a Stanford University School of Medicine study has found. The study, led by Nigam Shah, MBBS, PhD, assistant professor of medicine, will be published online April 10 in Nature Clinical Pharmacology and Therapeutics. This approach is a step forward in mining patient-based information, as opposed to coded insurance reports or drug-specific databases, to ...

Half of all patient complaints in Australia are about 3 percent of doctors

2013-04-11
Half of all formal patient complaints made in Australia to health ombudsmen concern just 3% of the country's doctors, with 1% accounting for a quarter of all complaints, finds research published online in BMJ Quality & Safety. Doctors complained about more than three times are highly likely to be the subject of a further complaint - and often within a couple of years - the findings show. The problem is unlikely to be confined to Australia, warn commentators, who point out that while regulators often know about these problem doctors, patients usually don't. The researchers ...

Rates of childhood squint surgery have plummeted over past 50 years

2013-04-11
Rates of surgery to correct childhood squint in England have tumbled over the past 50 years, finds research published online in the British Journal of Ophthalmology. But there's still a fivefold difference between the areas with the lowest and highest rates of the procedure, similar to the wide variations in tonsil removal, and it's not clear why, say the authors. Squint (strabismus) is one of the most common eye problems in children, with a prevalence of between 2% and 5%. Risk factors include family history, low birthweight, premature birth, being born to an older ...

The surprising ability of blood stem cells to respond to emergencies

2013-04-11
A research team of Inserm, CNRS and MDC lead by Michael Sieweke of the Centre d'Immunologie de Marseille Luminy (CNRS, INSERM, Aix Marseille Université) and Max Delbrück Centre for Molecular Medicine, Berlin-Buch, today revealed an unexpected role for hematopoietic stem cells: they do not merely ensure the continuous renewal of our blood cells; in emergencies they are capable of producing white blood cells "on demand" that help the body deal with inflammation or infection. This property could be used to protect against infections in patients undergoing bone marrow transplants, ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

CABI scientists suggest an accidentally introduced parasitoid could save box trees from ecological extinction

Study finds link between eczema patterns and children’s ability to outgrow food allergies

COVID-19 vaccination linked to reduced infections in children with eczema

Social media helps and hurts when it comes to allergy and asthma education

Oral food challenges and oral immunotherapy offer hope and confidence for families managing food allergies in young children

Thunderstorms linked to surge in asthma ER visits, new study shows

Pregnant women often miss out on specialist allergy care

Military deployment linked to higher risk of respiratory diseases, new study finds

People with allergies or eczema may face higher risk of surgical complications

New research highlights care challenges faced by children and adolescents with hereditary angioedema

Peanut patch treatment continues to help toddlers safely build tolerance over three years

ACAAI community grant projects explore innovative ways to address barriers to care

Newly discovered ‘hook’ in motor protein reveals how neurons deliver cargo with precision

Chung-Ang University researchers develop interlayer material for lithium-sulfur batteries

New study shows invasive Group A Streptococcus outcomes shaped by treatment strategies, not species lineage

Three new toad species skip the tadpole phase and give birth to live toadlets

Increased avoidance learning in chronic opioid users

RODIN project, funded by the European Research Council through a Synergy grant (ERC-Syn), will invest 10 M€ to explore cells as the architects of future biomaterials

ERC Synergy Grant 2025, Diagnosis and treatment in one go with a high-tech hybrid endoscopic device: the future of cancer care

EU awards an €8.33m ERC research grant for project How can we learn to live on Earth in new ways?

First study of its kind finds deep-sea mining waste threatens life and foodwebs in the ocean’s dim “twilight zone”

Early-stage clinical trial demonstrates promise of intranasal influenza vaccine in generating broad immunity

Study identifies which patients benefit most from new schizophrenia drug

Maternal type 1 diabetes may protect children through epigenetic changes

Austrian satellite mission PRETTY continues under the leadership of Graz University of Technology

Trust and fairness are Brazil’s most powerful climate tools, finds new Earth4All analysis ahead of COP30

APA poll reveals a nation suffering from stress of societal division, loneliness

Landscapes that remember: clues show Indigenous Peoples have thrived in the southwestern Amazon for more than 1,000 years

World’s first demonstration of entanglement swapping using sum-frequency generation between single photons

A combination treatment may help cut lifelong ibrutinib for chronic lymphocytic leukemia

[Press-News.org] World's oldest dinosaur embryo bonebed yields organic remains