'Dino Mummy' reveals there may be more skin in the fossil game
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Thursday, November 21, 2024


'Dino Mummy' reveals there may be more skin in the fossil game
In an undated handout image, Mindy Householder, a co-author of a study and a preparator at the State Historical Society of North Dakota, working on a section of fossil. Study of a hadrosaur named Dakota found a new explanation for how dinosaurs could be mummified with their skin preserved through the eons. Drumheller et al., PLoS One, 2022 via The New York Times.

by Jeanne Timmons



NEW YORK, NY.- Dakota the “dino mummy” has fascinated paleontologists and the public since part of the fossil was first untombed in North Dakota with some of its skin preserved.

Scientists are not finished making discoveries about Dakota, a duck-billed dinosaur, and they recently unlocked a well-preserved foot, a forelimb and more of its tail from the stone encasing the fossil. While more work needs to be done to fully expose this 66- to 67-million-year-old mummy, those parts of its anatomy alone are already challenging some paleontological theories.

A paper published Wednesday in the journal PLOS ONE focuses on those recently exposed body parts, and offers new insight into how fossil mummies like Dakota might have survived. The new research even suggests there may be far more mummified skin out there to find in the fossil record and study than previously believed, if only paleontologists look in the right places.

Before this research, mummified dinosaurs were said to form in one of two ways: They were either buried rapidly after death, or they remained intact in an arid landscape long enough for the carcass to be preserved.

But further studies into the sediments surrounding the fossil suggest that Dakota lived not in a dry, arid place, but in a humid, wet environment. Its body lay close to a water source in its final moments. Bite marks recently identified on its bone and skin also indicate significant scavenging on this animal from a variety of carrion feeders, including ancestors of modern crocodiles and perhaps carnivorous dinosaurs like young T. rex or Dakotaraptors. If this dinosaur died near water and was scavenged by predators, why didn’t its soft skin rot away?

A new answer to this question started with Stephanie Drumheller, a paleontologist and expert in bite marks at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville. CT scans showed the preserved skin was deflated, rather than compressed by sedimentary stone pressed down on it.

This was difficult to explain until Drumheller came to a realization: She had seen something like this in other preserved remains. But not dinosaur fossils. Rather, in human and mammalian bodies that were used in forensic anthropological research.

Human and mammalian remains can in some situations remain preserved in a wet environment for months. When these remains last it is because small scavengers burrow into the body, opening a pathway for liquids and gasses to exit, and the skin eventually dries out and is preserved.




“This is weird and unexpected if you’ve only read the paleontological literature dealing with mummies,” Drumheller said. “But it’s really in line with the forensic anthropological literature.”

Incomplete scavenging, the team asserts, can actually help preserve an animal, even a dinosaur. Large predators may take chunks out of the animal, but they’re after the more nutritious muscle and internal organs. The gouges they make in pursuit of that meal also allow gasses and liquids to escape the body. What remains on the landscape is a body of skin and bones that then slowly desiccates and deflates, eventually preserved for the eons.

The idea that “some degree of scavenging might favor the mummification of skin” is “an exciting discovery,” said Fion Waisum Ma, a vertebrate paleontologist at the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History who was not involved in the research. “This study is comprehensive,” she said, “and gives us a new perspective on how soft tissue preservation may have occurred in dinosaurs and more generally in land vertebrates.”

Anecdotally, the team heard a number of stories from colleagues finding more patches of fossilized skin in the field than they expected, particularly when excavating hadrosaurs. Finding such fossils seemed to contradict the conventional wisdom behind dinosaur mummification, but until now, the scientific literature didn’t offer any other explanation for what researchers were observing.

Clint Boyd, a co-author and paleontologist at the North Dakota Geologic Survey, said he hoped the study would prompt many of his colleagues to say: “Yeah, of course. That makes sense with what we’re seeing.”

For the past three years, removing more of Dakota’s fossils from stone has been the work of Mindy Householder, another co-author of the study and a preparator at the State Historical Society of North Dakota. Her early work as a fossil preparator didn’t even include the possibility of fossil skin. Locating the bone within and removing it from the stone in which it was preserved, she said, was the focus of her training, and such methods may result in preserved skin being lost. It wasn’t until working on Dakota that this began to change.

The evidence she and her colleagues discovered, she said, may mean that “skin is more common than we thought it was.” And this, she added, “definitely should change” how fossils are treated.

Skin “could be there!” she said. “As a community, maybe we need to be more aware of that.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










Today's News

October 14, 2022

'3,000 years of history are literally just beneath our feet'

Angela Lansbury, star of film and stage and TV's favorite sleuth, dies at 96

Prince photo or just formerly known as one? Supreme Court weighs Warhol's art.

Lawsuit says Judd sculpture was disfigured by fingerprints

'Dino Mummy' reveals there may be more skin in the fossil game

At Frieze, shining a spotlight on women artists

Anita Kerr, an architect of the Nashville Sound, dies at 94

Bellmans off to a great start on first day of October auctions

Pasto works and Gehry chairs lead the California Living sale presented by John Moran Auctioneers

The Brooklyn Museum appoints Rachel Shechtman as its first Entrepreneur in Residence

Ignored in life, Bernice Bing is discovered as museums rewrite history

A London monument to equality, inspired by an act of defiance

'The Global Life of Design' opens at NGV International

This fall, London is awash in sculpture

FBI monitored Aretha Franklin for years, file shows

MacArthur Foundation announces 25 new 'genius' grant winners

'Brexit Festival' is under investigation over cost

Boston International Antiquarian Book Fair returns to Boston, November 11-13

Trio of Warhol's Marilyns star in Bonhams New York Modern & Contemporary Prints & Multiples sale

Foujita's muse of muses inspires bidders at Bonhams Impressionist Sale in London

Morphy Auctions acquires Route 32 Auctions and Indy Ad Show

'A Strange Loop,' which won best musical, will end Broadway run

AstaGuru's upcoming auction pays a tribute to revolutionary Art Deco movement

The Most Common Fitbit Problems and How to fix Them

Best Colors for Business Brand Identity

How to Know If You Have a Slip and Fall Accident Lawsuit?

Expand Your Taxi Business Using These Six Effective Methods




Museums, Exhibits, Artists, Milestones, Digital Art, Architecture, Photography,
Photographers, Special Photos, Special Reports, Featured Stories, Auctions, Art Fairs,
Anecdotes, Art Quiz, Education, Mythology, 3D Images, Last Week, .

 



Founder:
Ignacio Villarreal
(1941 - 2019)
Editor & Publisher: Jose Villarreal
Art Director: Juan José Sepúlveda Ramírez
Writer: Ofelia Zurbia Betancourt

Royalville Communications, Inc
produces:

ignaciovillarreal.org juncodelavega.com facundocabral-elfinal.org
Founder's Site. Hommage
to a Mexican poet.
Hommage
       

The First Art Newspaper on the Net. The Best Versions Of Ave Maria Song Junco de la Vega Site Ignacio Villarreal Site
Tell a Friend
Dear User, please complete the form below in order to recommend the Artdaily newsletter to someone you know.
Please complete all fields marked *.
Sending Mail
Sending Successful