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A titanosaur (sauropod) nesting site from South America

JacksinPA

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Here, we describe the first titanosaur nesting site from the Late Cretaceous of Brazil that represents the most boreal nesting site for South America. Several egg-clutches, partially preserved, isolated eggs and many eggshell fragments were discovered in an Inceptisol palaeosol profile of the mining Lafarge Quarry, at the Ponte Alta District (Uberaba Municipality, Minas Gerais State), corresponding to the Serra da Galga Formation (Bauru Group, Bauru Basin). Although classical mechanical preparation and CT scans have not revealed embryonic remains in ovo, the eggs and eggshell features match those eggs containing titanosaurian embryos found worldwide. The morphology of the egg-clutches and observations of the sedimentary characteristics bolster the hypothesis that these sauropods were burrow-nester dinosaurs, as was already suggested for the group based on other nesting sites. The egg-clutches distributed in two levels along the Lafarge outcrops, together with the geopalaeontological data collected, provide clear evidence for the first colonial nesting and breeding area of titanosaur dinosaurs in Brazil.
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Titanosaurs were very large sauropods found as fossils woldwide. Here is a report of the discovery of nesting sites where these huge reptiles layed clutches of eggs.

While many may question whether birds descended from Mesozoic dinosaurs, they had a lot in common, as shown in this paper: they made nests in which they deposited clutches of eggs. Some eggs contain fossilized embryos.
 
Titanosaur nest with eggs pic
 

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