Timeline of egg fossil research

Fossilized Dinosaur eggs displayed at Indroda Dinosaur and Fossil Park.

This timeline of egg fossils research is a chronologically ordered list of important discoveries, controversies of interpretation, taxonomic revisions, and cultural portrayals of egg fossils. Humans have encountered egg fossils for thousands of years. In stone age Mongolia, local peoples fashioned fossil dinosaur eggshell into jewelry. In the Americas, fossil eggs may have inspired Navajo creation myths about the human theft of a primordial water monster's egg. Nevertheless, the scientific study of fossil eggs began much later. As reptiles, dinosaurs were presumed to have laid eggs from the 1820s on, when their first scientifically documented remains were being described in England.[1] In 1859, the first scientifically documented dinosaur egg fossils were discovered in southern France by a Catholic priest and amateur naturalist named Father Jean-Jacques Poech, however he thought they were laid by giant birds.

The first scientifically recognized dinosaur egg fossils were discovered serendipitously in 1923 by an American Museum of Natural History crew while looking for evidence of early humans in Mongolia. These eggs were mistakenly attributed to the locally abundant herbivore Protoceratops, but are now known to be Oviraptor eggs. Egg discoveries continued to mount all over the world, leading to the development of multiple competing classification schemes. In 1975 Chinese paleontologist Zhao Zi-Kui started a revolution in fossil egg classification by developing a system of "parataxonomy" based on the traditional Linnaean system to classify eggs based on their physical qualities rather than their hypothesized mothers. Zhao's new method of egg classification was hindered from adoption by Western scientists due to language barriers. However, in the early 1990s Russian paleontologist Konstantin Mikhailov brought attention to Zhao's work in the English language scientific literature.

Prescientific

See also: Adrienne Mayor

Late Paleolithic to early Neolithic

Precolumbian North America

19th-century paleontology

1859

1869

20th-century paleontology

Fossilized nest specimen AMNH FR 6508, recovered from Mongolia during the Central Asiatic Expedition of 1923.

1913

1919

1922

1923

1939

1946

1957

1964

1966

1969

1970

Folinsbee and his colleagues became one of the first research teams to study dinosaur eggs using mass spectrometry. They found that the eggshell of fossil eggs they attributed to the dinosaur Protoceratops (actually Oviraptor) had more delta Oxygen 18 compared to delta Oxygen 16 in the calcium carbonate of their shell. This implies that the mother's drinking water had a higher percentage of the heavier oxygen in its water molecules due to evaporation, which meant the environment was hot.[21]

They also found that the carbon in the eggshell is mostly the heavier Carbon 13 rather than the lighterCarbon 12. This means the dinosaur were primarily feeding on C3 plants which use 3 carbon atoms in their photosynthesis products rather than C4 plants that use four.[22]

Reconstruction of a Maiasaura nest with eggs

1975

1978

1979

1991

Early to mid-1990s

21st-century paleontology

2009

See also

Footnotes

  1. Carpenter (1999); "First Discoveries", page 1.
  2. 1 2 3 Carpenter (1999); "First Discoveries", page 4.
  3. Mayor (2005); page 128.
  4. Mayor (2005); page 129.
  5. Mayor (2005); pages 129–130.
  6. 1 2 Carpenter (1999); "First Discoveries", page 5.
  7. 1 2 Carpenter (1999); "First Discoveries", page 6.
  8. Carpenter (1999); "Reason 3. Eggshell Too Thin, Eggshell Too Thick", page 253.
  9. Carpenter (1999); "First Discoveries", pages 6–7.
  10. 1 2 Carpenter (1999); "United States", pages 15–16.
  11. Carpenter (1999); "United States", page 16.
  12. Carpenter (1999); "First Discoveries", pages 1–2.
  13. Carpenter (1999); "First Discoveries", page 2.
  14. 1 2 3 Carpenter (1999); "Evolution of the Reptile Egg", page 43.
  15. Carpenter (1999); "India", page 27.
  16. Carpenter (1999); "India", page 28.
  17. Carpenter (1999); "Canada", page 19.
  18. 1 2 Etches, Clarke, and Callomon (2009); "Introduction", page 205.
  19. Carpenter (1999); "United States", pages 16–18.
  20. "Tools of the Trade", Carpenter (1999); page 125.
  21. "Tools of the Trade", Carpenter (1999); page 131.
  22. 1 2 3 "Tools of the Trade", Carpenter (1999); page 132.
  23. "Growth of the Modern Classification System", Carpenter (1999); pages 148-149.
  24. Horner (2001); "History of Dinosaur Collecting in Montana", page 56.
  25. Carpenter (1999); "How to Fossilize an Egg", page 112.
  26. "Growth of the Modern Classification System", Carpenter (1999); page 149.
  27. Etches, Clarke, and Callomon (2009); "Abstract", page 204.

References

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