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1 December 2004 ABNORMAL, MULTILAYERED TITANOSAUR (DINOSAURIA: SAUROPODA) EGGS FROM IN SITU CLUTCHES AT THE AUCA MAHUEVO LOCALITY, NEUQUÉN PROVINCE, ARGENTINA
FRANKIE D. JACKSON, ALBERTO GARRIDO, JAMES G. SCHMITT, LUIS M. CHIAPPE, LOWELL DINGUS, DAVID B. LOOPE
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Abstract

Abnormal, multilayered eggshells are frequently reported in fossil specimens. However, previous reports of this pathological condition pertain to taxonomically unidentified fossil eggs or eggshell fragments rather than in situ clutches. A survey of 393 in situ clutches, referable to titanosaur sauropod dinosaurs, from Upper Cretaceous rocks in northwestern Patagonia, Argentina, revealed that six of these clutches contain both normal eggs and abnormal, multilayered eggs within the same clutch. Excavation of one clutch exposed 30 eggs, distributed in three levels, including 27 normal eggs and 3 multilayered eggs. The three abnormal eggs occupied the highest level within the clutch and represent the last eggs laid by the female sauropod. The innermost eggshell layer in multilayered eggs from all six clutches exhibits typical megaloolithid calcite structure. The structure of the overlying, abnormal shell layer(s), however, varies among the clutches and within a single egg. Three types of abnormal eggshell morphology are documented. All previous studies that link abnormal eggshells to dinosaur physiology and the terminal Cretaceous extinction event are incomplete in terms of taphonomy, taxonomic identification, and lack rigorous statistical methods.

FRANKIE D. JACKSON, ALBERTO GARRIDO, JAMES G. SCHMITT, LUIS M. CHIAPPE, LOWELL DINGUS, and DAVID B. LOOPE "ABNORMAL, MULTILAYERED TITANOSAUR (DINOSAURIA: SAUROPODA) EGGS FROM IN SITU CLUTCHES AT THE AUCA MAHUEVO LOCALITY, NEUQUÉN PROVINCE, ARGENTINA," Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology 24(4), 913-922, (1 December 2004). https://doi.org/10.1671/0272-4634(2004)024[0913:AMTDSE]2.0.CO;2
Received: 11 August 2003; Accepted: 19 January 2004; Published: 1 December 2004
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