Fossilised dinosaur embryo found exquisitely preserved inside egg

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A fossilised dinosaur embryo discovered in southern China may be the most well-preserved ever uncovered.

The dinosaur egg containing the embryo had languished for more than a decade in a storeroom in Yingliang Stone Natural History Museum in Nan’an, China, until 2015, when a staff member noticed bones sticking out of the shell and wondered if it may contain an unhatched dinosaur.

“The museum realised it must be an important specimen, so they contacted us to look at the egg,” says Waisum Ma at the University of Birmingham in the UK. “We were surprised to see this embryo beautifully preserved inside.”

The unhatched dinosaur’s 24-centimetre-long skeleton is curled inside the egg, with its head tucked tightly into its body. The egg is 17 centimetres long and 8 centimetres wide.

Features of the skeleton suggest it is an oviraptorid – a two-legged dinosaur that had a bird-like head and feathers.

The egg appears to be 72 to 66 million years old. It was probably buried rapidly in sand or mud to allow its remarkable preservation, says Ma. “It is very rare to find dinosaur embryos, especially ones that are intact,” she says.

The embryos of modern birds also adopt a tucked posture to protect themselves for hatching. This suggests the posture first evolved in dinosaurs, not in modern birds as was previously thought, says Ma. “We’ve never had embryos well-preserved enough to see this before,” she says.

Little is known about the egg’s origins, except that it was found in Shahe Industrial Park in Ganzhou City in southern China and donated to the museum in 2000. “We’re not sure how it was first discovered but we guess it was something related to construction work,” says Ma.

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Was looking forward to some Jurassic Park stuff but still really neat. Hope this isn’t another Terracotta Army type discovery.
 
Hope this isn’t another Terracotta Army type discovery.
Could you elaborate? Learning about that in school, I just thought "kinda weird, but cool I guess" and there is no controversy section on wiki.

How do they know it's a dinosaur embryo and not just a random clump of cells?
it's past the 2nd trimester or whatever the laws in said jurisdiction happen to be because that's how science works.
 
The embryos of modern birds also adopt a tucked posture to protect themselves for hatching. This suggests the posture first evolved in dinosaurs, not in modern birds as was previously thought, says Ma.
I mean, if birds are the closest living descendant of dinosaurs, I assume many characteristics from conception to hatching day will have been the same. Any paleontologists who believed that from the start are probably leaping for joy at this discovery for being vindicated.

Looking up embryonic development has been pretty fascinating, and avian development is very well-documented. It'd be safe to say dinosaurs formed the same way.
 
They found it in China let's hope it actually goes to scientists and not on display in some Chong Casino.

Fossil trafficking is a huge issue many unique and scientifically important finds end up in the living rooms of tech billionaires and other douchebags.

Head of the WWF has a complex T-Rex skull in his office that he outbid a museum for.
 
They found it in China let's hope it actually goes to scientists and not on display in some Chong Casino.

Fossil trafficking is a huge issue many unique and scientifically important finds end up in the living rooms of tech billionaires and other douchebags.

Head of the WWF has a complex T-Rex skull in his office that he outbid a museum for.

Ancient Chinese did discover Dinosaur remains and assumed they were Dragon remains
 
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