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. 2020 Jul;583(7816):406-410.
doi: 10.1038/s41586-020-2412-8. Epub 2020 Jun 17.

The first dinosaur egg was soft

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The first dinosaur egg was soft

Mark A Norell et al. Nature. 2020 Jul.

Abstract

Calcified eggshells protect developing embryos against environmental stress and contribute to reproductive success1. As modern crocodilians and birds lay hard-shelled eggs, this eggshell type has been inferred for non-avian dinosaurs. Known dinosaur eggshells are characterized by an innermost membrane, an overlying protein matrix containing calcite, and an outermost waxy cuticle2-7. The calcitic eggshell consists of one or more ultrastructural layers that differ markedly among the three major dinosaur clades, as do the configurations of respiratory pores. So far, only hadrosaurid, a few sauropodomorph and tetanuran eggshells have been discovered; the paucity of the fossil record and the lack of intermediate eggshell types challenge efforts to homologize eggshell structures across all dinosaurs8-18. Here we present mineralogical, organochemical and ultrastructural evidence for an originally non-biomineralized, soft-shelled nature of exceptionally preserved ornithischian Protoceratops and basal sauropodomorph Mussaurus eggs. Statistical evaluation of in situ Raman spectra obtained for a representative set of hard- and soft-shelled, fossil and extant diapsid eggshells clusters the originally organic but secondarily phosphatized Protoceratops and the organic Mussaurus eggshells with soft, non-biomineralized eggshells. Histology corroborates the organic composition of these soft-shelled dinosaur eggs, revealing a stratified arrangement resembling turtle soft eggshell. Through an ancestral-state reconstruction of composition and ultrastructure, we compare eggshells from Protoceratops and Mussaurus with those from other diapsids, revealing that the first dinosaur egg was soft-shelled. The calcified, hard-shelled dinosaur egg evolved independently at least three times throughout the Mesozoic era, explaining the bias towards eggshells of derived dinosaurs in the fossil record.

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Comment in

  • Hard evidence from soft fossil eggs.
    Lindgren J, Kear BP. Lindgren J, et al. Nature. 2020 Jul;583(7816):365-366. doi: 10.1038/d41586-020-01732-8. Nature. 2020. PMID: 32661412 No abstract available.
  • Triassic sauropodomorph eggshell might not be soft.
    Choi S, Yang TR, Moreno-Azanza M, Zhang S, Kim NH. Choi S, et al. Nature. 2022 Oct;610(7932):E8-E10. doi: 10.1038/s41586-022-05151-9. Epub 2022 Oct 19. Nature. 2022. PMID: 36261569 No abstract available.

References

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    1. Hou, L. H., Li, P. P., Ksepka, D. T., Gao, K. Q. & Norell, M. A. Implications of flexible-shelled eggs in a Cretaceous choristoderan reptile. Proc. R. Soc. B 277, 1235–1239 (2010). - DOI

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