BrainStuff Classics: What Can a Cache of Pterosaur Eggs Teach Us? - podcast episode cover

BrainStuff Classics: What Can a Cache of Pterosaur Eggs Teach Us?

Dec 12, 20207 min
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Episode description

A huge cache of ancient pterosaur eggs has been unearthed in China. Learn what this find can tell us about these flying contemporaries of dinosaurs in this episode of BrainStuff.

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Transcript

Speaker 1

Welcome to brain Stuff production of I Heart Radio. Hey brain Stuff, I'm Lauren vogel Bomb and this is another classic episode from our archive. Every time a new cash of the remains of incredible prehistoric animals crops up, it's cause for celebration. In this episode, we dig into the amazing find of hundreds of parasaur eggs. Hey there, brain Stuff, Lauren vogel Bomb. Here. Flight is a hard thing to master.

The vast majority of vertebrates can walk, swim, or do both, but in the history of life on this planet, only three groups of backboned animals have ever evolved the ability to fly. Early bats acquired the skill roughly fifty two million years ago. Feathered dinosaurs began to experiment with flight back in the Jurassic period. Incidentally, you probably know of their descendants today as birds. Yet while birds and bats are still around, the animals that first pioneered vertebrate flight

are long gone. That's because hundred and twenty eight million years ago, a flying plade of reptiles evolved. These were the pterosaurs. Though Hollywood often mislabels them as dinosaurs, they actually represented a separate, contemporaneous group for more than a hundred and sixty million years, dinosaurs and pterosaurs lived side by side. It was an exciting time to be an aeronaut. During their reign, the pterosaurs diversified like crazy. Some species

would be comparable to sparrows in size. Others had wingspans of thirty six feet that's eleven meters or more, making them the largest flying animals of all time. Then, sixty six million years ago, the pterosaurs succumbed to the same mass extinction that wiped out all non avian dinosaurs. In four Italian naturalist Cosmo Collini became the first person to write a formal scientific description of a pterosaur skeleton. At the time, he thought this strange looking animal was some

kind of deep sea creature. But thanks to hard working paleontologists, we've learned a great deal about these winged wonders. Nonetheless, there are still some large gaps in our knowledge. One big mystery involves the early lives of young pterosaurs. The first confirmed dinosaur and nest was unearthed in nineteen twenty three. Since then, fossil hunters have excavated thousands of dino eggs sites all over the world. Yet terrasaur eggs are considerably rarer.

None whatsoever were discovered until two thousand four, when two appeared in China and a third showed up in Argentina. In twenty eleven, a fourth egg was found next to the skeleton of its presumed mother, an adult animal from the genus Darwin a terrace. Three years later and another Argentinian egg emerged, along with five additional Chinese specimens. So until very recently, the global scientific community hadn't found enough terosaur eggs to fill as standard egg carton, but paleontologists

just hit the motherload. In the December twenty seventeen issue of the journal Science, a Chinese research team announced the discovery of a new site in China's Globi Desert containing at least two hundred and fifteen pterosaur eggs. Sixteen preserved embryos were found there as well, along with some skeletons from hatchling, juvenile and adult pterosaurs. These eggs are roughly a hundred and twenty million years old and were laid by Hamateus tiensnsis a crusted toothy species with an eleven

foot wingspan that's about three point three meters. Terrasaur experts are still trying to assess where it belongs on the family tree. One such authority is paleontologist David Hohne, who told us in an email that Hamateus' closest relatives were most likely various groups of terrasaurs known for being ocean going or at least coastal foragers. In terms of lifestyle, he says these animals would have behaved like today's gulls

and albatrosses. The newfound bounty of eggs was recovered by a team representing the Beijing based Chinese Academy of Sciences. Most of the shelled treasures were embedded in a sandstone block that may be hiding even more clutches that have yet to be revealed. One reason why this find is so spectacular has to do with the fragility of terrasaur eggshells.

Like modern chickens, extinct dinosaurs laid hard shelled eggs. Contrast these with the eggs of present day snakes, whose shells are thin, soft, pliable, and have the xture of old parchment. Terrasaur eggs resembled the ladder, a fact confirmed by previous discoveries. Because their shells were so soft, these rare eggs tend to get squitched flat by the forces of fossilization, Yet the ones that this new Chinese site were preserved in

three dimensions. The discoveries implications are still open to debate. Chinese Academy of Sciences paleontologist Shallon Wang was the lead author of the paper in the journal Science which announced this big find. In it, he and his co authors suggest the site may have a lot to say about terrasaur parenting. As Whang and his colleagues point out, some of the embryo's lack teeth and their wingbones seem underdeveloped. The paleontologists think this could mean that newly hatched Hamma

terrists could neither fly nor eat solid food. Thus they would have had to depend on their parents for protection and sustenance. Other scientists have disagreed with that conclusion. In present day reptiles, teeth are one of the last things embryos developed, so while these developing terosaurs were toothless, they

might still have grown some choppers before had ching. Also, according to Michael Habib, a pterosaur specialist at the University of California, the fetal wings appeared quite robust, meaning the newborns might have been able to start flying right away. A point of consensus among paleontologists, though, is that pterosaurs probably didn't brood their eggs like present day birds. For one thing, as Homee told us, the extinct reptiles simply

could not sit like birds due to the anatomical differences. Also, while terrasaurs were coated with fuzzy stuff, they lacked feathers, which roosting avians used to keep their clutches nice and warm. Another leading expert in modern terrasaur science one S Christopher Bennett of Fort Hayes State University in Kansas, agrees. He said via email, there's no evidence and no reason to

think that terosaurs incubated their eggs. Rather, they probably deposited them in sands, soils, or vegetable matter, like modern reptiles. In the past, Bennett has championed the idea that at least some terrasaurs formed nesting groups near environments suitable for

the hatchlings to feed and grow safely. He feels the new Hemiates site may lend some credence to that notion, a sentiment shared by Weighing and his co authors, but it added careful excavation of terrasaur egg deposits could certainly provide evidence as to whether eggs were buried and whether terrasaurs reused desting sites year after year. Today's episode was written by Mark Mancini and produced by Tristan McNeil and Tyler Playing. For more on this and lots of other

terrorific topics, visit housetuffworks dot com. Brain Stuff is production of I Heart Radio. For more podcasts my heart Radio, visit the heart Radio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you listen to your favorite shows,

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