When.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Dinosaur egg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinosaur_egg

    Dinosaur eggs whose embryos died were likely victims of similar causes to those that kill embryos in modern reptile and bird eggs. Typical causes of death include congenital problems, diseases, suffocation from being buried too deep, inimical temperatures, or too much or too little water.

  3. 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]

  4. Egg taphonomy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Egg_taphonomy

    Dinosaur eggs may have been the victim of the same causes of mortality suffered by modern bird and reptile eggs, like asphyxiation due to overly deep burial, congenital health problems, dehydration, disease, drowning, and inimical temperatures. After hatching or death the processes of decomposition and/or preservation begin.

  5. Physiology of dinosaurs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physiology_of_dinosaurs

    No dinosaur egg has been found that is larger than a basketball and embryos of large dinosaurs have been found in relatively small eggs, e.g. Maiasaura. [53] Like mammals, dinosaurs stopped growing when they reached the typical adult size of their species, while mature reptiles continued to grow slowly if they had enough food.

  6. Fossils from Mongolia, Argentina show some dinosaurs laid ...

    www.aol.com/news/fossils-mongolia-argentina-show...

    The embryo-containing eggs - leathery on the outside rather than hard and calcified like those of birds - belonged to a dinosaur from Patagonia called Mussaurus from about 200 million years ago ...

  7. 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.

  8. 80-million-year-old dinosaur eggs dug up in China are the ...

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

    Six small non-avian dinosaur eggs, no bigger than grapes, were discovered during a field study in Ganzhou, China, in 2021. These eggs now mark the smallest-ever found in the world.

  9. Macroelongatoolithus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macroelongatoolithus

    Macroelongatoolithus is an oogenus of large theropod dinosaur eggs, representing the eggs of giant caenagnathid oviraptorosaurs. They are known from Asia and from North America. Historically, several oospecies have been assigned to Macroelongatoolithus, however they are all now considered to be a single oospecies: M. carlylensis.