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  2. Timeline of egg fossil research - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_egg_fossil...

    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 ...

  3. Timeline of Cretaceous–Paleogene extinction event research

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_Cretaceous...

    Philip Kerourio debunked Erben and others' suggestion that an increase in the incidence of pathological eggs in dinosaurs led to their extinction. He found that only 0.5–2.5% of eggs in the area Erben and the others studied had multiple shell layers and observed no evidence that these pathologies became more common through the Late Cretaceous ...

  4. Dinosaur egg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinosaur_egg

    Fossilized sauropod eggs displayed at Indroda Dinosaur and Fossil Park. Dinosaur eggs are the organic vessels in which a dinosaur embryo develops. When the first scientifically documented remains of non-avian dinosaurs were being described in England during the 1820s, it was presumed that dinosaurs had laid eggs because they were reptiles. [1]

  5. 80-million-year-old dinosaur eggs dug up in China are the ...

    www.aol.com/80-million-old-dinosaur-eggs...

    The previous record for the smallest non-avian dinosaur egg, according to Guinness World Records, measures 45-by-20 millimeters (about 1.77-by-0.79 inches). Discovered in Japan's Tamba City, this ...

  6. Dinosaur reproduction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinosaur_reproduction

    Model of a dinosaur egg. Dinosaur reproduction shows correlation with archosaur physiology, with newborns hatching from eggs that were laid in nests. [1] [2] Dinosaurs did not nurture their offspring as mammals typically do, and because dinosaurs did not nurse, it is likely that most dinosaurs were capable of surviving on their own after hatching. [3]

  7. Oviraptor - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oviraptor

    Oviraptor (/ ˈ oʊ v ɪ r æ p t ər /; lit. ' egg thief ') is a genus of oviraptorid dinosaur that lived in Asia during the Late Cretaceous period. The first remains were collected from the Djadokhta Formation of Mongolia in 1923 during a paleontological expedition led by Roy Chapman Andrews, and in the following year the genus and type species Oviraptor philoceratops were named by Henry ...

  8. A 193-million-year old nesting ground with more than 100 ...

    www.aol.com/news/193-million-old-nesting-ground...

    Paleontologists found 100 eggs and 80 skeletons from a dinosaur called Mussaurus at a site in Patagonia, suggesting the animals lived in groups.

  9. We finally know how long it took for dinosaur eggs to hatch - AOL

    www.aol.com/news/2017-01-10-we-finally-know-how...

    According to lead author Gregory Erickson, the amount of care dinosaurs needed to put into incubating their eggs may have been a fatal disadvantage to survive predators as well as environmental ...