Duck-billed dinosaurs had an amazing capacity to chew tough and
abrasive plants with grinding teeth more complex than those of horses,
cows and other well-known modern grazers, researchers have found.
A study by paleontologists and engineers, published in the journal
Science, is the first to recover material properties from fossilized
teeth.
Duck-bill dinosaurs, also known as hadrosaurids, were the dominant
plant-eaters in what is now Europe, North America, and Asia during the
Late Cretaceous about 85 million years ago.
With broad jaws bearing as many as 1400 teeth, hadrosaurids were
previously thought to have chewing surfaces similar to other reptiles,
which have teeth comprised of just two tissues — enamel, a hard
hypermineralized material, and orthodentine, a soft bone-like tissue.
But paleontologists who study the fossilized teeth of these animals in detail suspected that they were not that simple.
“We thought for a long time that there was more going on because you
could just look at the surface of the tooth and see advanced topography,
which suggests that there are many different tissues present,” said
Mark Norell, chairman of the American Museum of Natural History’s
Division of Paleontology and an author on the paper.
To investigate the dinosaurs’ dental structure and properties in
depth, Norell worked with lead author Gregory Erickson, a biology
professor at Florida State University, and a team of engineers on a
series of novel experiments.
Erickson sectioned the fossilized teeth and made microscope slides from them.
These revealed that hadrosaurids actually had six different types of
dental tissues — four more than reptiles and two more than expert mammal
grinders such as horses, cows, and elephants.
Using a technique called nanoindentation, in which a diamond-tipped
probe is indented and/or drawn across the fossilized teeth to mimic the
grinding of abrasive food, the researchers determined the differential
hardness and wear rates of the dental tissues.
Erickson, who describes hadrosaurid dinosaurs as “walking pulp
mills”, said: “We were stunned to find that the mechanical properties of
the teeth were preserved after 70 million years of fossilization.
“If you put these teeth back into a living dinosaur they would function perfectly.”
In addition to the four dental tissues found in mammals — enamel,
orthodentine, secondary dentine that helps prevent cavities, and coronal
cementum that supports the teeth’s crests —the hadrosaurid teeth
include giant tubules and a thick mantle dentine.
These extra tissues are thought to provide additional prevention against abscesses.
Also unlike mammalian teeth, the dental tissue distribution in hadrosaurids greatly varied in each tooth.
Together, these characteristics suggest that hadrosaurids evolved the
most known in vertebrate animals, which might have led to their
extensive diversification.
“Duck-bills’ advanced tissue modification appears to have allowed
them to radiate into specialized ecological niches where they ate
extremely tough plants like fern, horsetail, and ground cover that were
not as easy for dinosaurs with shearing teeth to eat,” Norell said.
“Their complex dentition could have played a major role in keeping them on the planet for nearly 35 million years.”
In addition, the findings provide strong evidence that dental wear
properties are preserved in fossil teeth — an idea that was once
questioned and overruled in this study with comparative tests on teeth
from modern and fossilized horses and bison.
This opens the door for studies on the dental biomechanics of fossils
from wide-ranging groups of animals to better understand evolutionary
modifications in diets.
This research was supported by the National Science Foundation.
Other authors include Brandon Krick, Matthew Hamilton, and Gregory
Sawyer, of the University of Florida; Gerald Bourne, of the Colorado
School of Mines; and Erica Lilleodden, of the Institute of Materials
Research, Materials Mechanics, in Helmholtz-Zentrum Geesthacht, Germany.
Source:
http://horsetalk.co.nz/2012/10/08/dinosaur-more-complex-grinding-teeth-than-horses-experts/#.UHL6-67c_so

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