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TOPIC: Dinosaurs


L

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RE: Dinosaurs
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New MSU research sheds light on South Pole dinosaurs

Dog-sized dinosaurs that lived near the South Pole, sometimes in the dark for months at a time, had bone tissue very similar to dinosaurs that lived everywhere on the planet, according to a doctoral candidate at Montana State University.
That surprising fact falsifies a 13-year-old study and may help explain why dinosaurs were able to dominate the planet for 160 million years, said Holly Woodward, MSU graduate student in the Department of Earth Sciences and co-author of a paper published Aug. 3 in the journal PLoS ONE.

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Holes in fossil bones reveal dinosaur activity

New research from the University of Adelaide has added to the debate about whether dinosaurs were cold-blooded and sluggish or warm-blooded and active.
Human thigh bones have tiny holes - known as the 'nutrient foramen' - on the shaft that supply blood to living bone cells inside.  New research has shown that the size of those holes is related to the maximum rate that a person can be active during aerobic exercise.  Professor Seymour has used this principle to evaluate the activity levels of dinosaurs.

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Scientists Measure Body Temperature of Dinosaurs for the First Time

Researchers, led by Robert Eagle of the California Institute of Technology, have developed a new way of determining the body temperatures of dinosaurs for the first time, providing new insights into whether dinosaurs were cold- or warm-blooded.
By analysing the teeth of sauropods--long-tailed, long-necked dinosaurs that were the biggest land animals ever to have lived--the scientists found that these dinosaurs were about as warm as most modern mammals.

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Jack Horner: Building a dinosaur from a chicken

Renowned palaeontologist Jack Horner has spent his career trying to reconstruct a dinosaur. He's found fossils with extraordinarily well-preserved blood vessels and soft tissues, but never intact DNA. So, in a new approach, he's taking living descendants of the dinosaur (chickens) and genetically engineering them to reactivate ancestral traits - including teeth, tails, and even hands - to make a "Chickenosaurus".
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TEDxVancouver - Jack Horner - The Shape-Shifting Skulls of Dinosaurs



"The Shape-Shifting Skulls of Dinosaurs" will focus on our latest discoveries concerning how dinosaur skulls changed as they grew to adult hood, and why it is that some dinosaur species are actually juvenile growth stages of other species. I will illustrate how it is that scientists got it wrong to begin with, and how we figured it all out. The talk will concern field work, studies in morphology, and osteohistology (the microscopic study of bone)



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L

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Dinosaur Skin
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Dinosaur Skin Scraps Are a Jurassic Mystery

Though not nearly as common as the bone fragments and bits of tooth found at dinosaur fossil sites, remnants and impressions of dinosaur skin are not as rare as you might think. Palaeontologists have been finding them for more than a century. The delicate fossil traces are often easy to miss - fossil hunters may even unintentionally destroy them in the process of excavating a skeleton or bone - but palaeontologists have slowly been accumulating a collection of dinosaur skin traces. The newest specimens, reported by scientists John Foster and Rebecca Hunt-Foster in the new issue of the Journal of Vertebrate Palaeontology, come from the Jurassic rock of Colorado's Morrison Formation.
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L

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Daemonosaurus chauliodus
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Sharp-toothed fossil links old and new dinosaurs

The surprising discovery of a fossil of a sharp-toothed beast that lurked in what is now the western U.S. more than 200 million years ago is filling a gap in dinosaur evolution.
The short snout and slanting front teeth of the find - Daemonosaurus chauliodus - had never before been seen in a Triassic era dinosaur, said Hans-Dieter Sues of the Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History. Sues and colleagues report the discovery in Wednesday's edition of the British journal Proceedings of the Royal Society B.

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Sauropods
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How Did Sauropods Get So Big?

Until about 65 million years ago, giants lumbered across rocky ravines and pushed their way through humid forests of conifer and fern.
These were long-necked, quadrupedal sauropods, a group of dinosaurs well-known to American Museum of Natural History visitors from the Barosaurus that rears up to greet them in the Theodore Roosevelt Rotunda to the Apatosaurus that has been on display in the Hall of Saurischian Dinosaurs since 1905. (Sauropods are also the focus of the major new exhibition, The World's Largest Dinosaurs, which opens Saturday, April 16). Sauropods maxed out in size with Argentinosaurus, an animal that perhaps weighed up to 90 tons, or as much as 18 adult male African elephants.

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A rare dinosaur fossil has been found near Fort McMurray.
 While working on site, Suncor employees noticed a large lump of dirt with an odd texture and diamond patterns. Following established practice, employees halted work and sent photos of the strange sight to the Royal Tyrrell Museum. 
 A scientist and technician from the Museum flew to Fort McMurray early Wednesday morning expecting to find a marine reptile fossil, because of the area's ancient history as a sea bed. When they arrived, they were amazed to discover a 110-million-year-old fossil of an ankylosaur, a rare dinosaur covered with bony plates of armour.

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Feathered Dinosaurs
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Coup de froid au temps des dinosaures

Les dinosaures n'ont pas toujours bénéficié de températures clémentes. De nouveaux résultats montrent que durant une partie du Crétacé inférieur, le nord-est de la Chine a été soumis à un climat tempéré avec des hivers rigoureux. Cette découverte explique l'abondance de dinosaures à « plumes » dans les gisements fossiles de cette période. Elle vient d'être mise en évidence par une collaboration internationale coordonnée par Romain Amiot du Laboratoire de géologie de Lyon : terre, planètes et environnement (CNRS/ENS de Lyon/Université Lyon 1). Leurs travaux sont publiés sur le site des PNAS au cours de la semaine du 7 mars 2011.
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