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- How 'Parrot Dinosaur' Switched from Four Feet to Two as It Grew
Tracking the growth of dinosaurs and how they changed as they grew is
difficult. Using a combination of biomechanical analysis and bone
histology, palaeontologists from Beijing, Bristol, and Bonn have shown
how one of the best-known dinosaurs switched from four feet to two as it
grew.
Psittacosaurus, the 'parrot dinosaur' is known from more
than 1000 specimens from the Cretaceous, 100 million years ago, of China
and other parts of east Asia. As part of his PhD thesis at the
University of Bristol, Qi Zhao, now on the staff of the Institute for
Vertebrate Paleontology in Beijing, carried out the intricate study on
bones of babies, juveniles and adults.
Dr Zhao said: "Some of the bones from baby Psittacosaurus
were only a few millimetres across, so I had to handle them extremely
carefully to be able to make useful bone sections. I also had to be sure
to cause as little damage to these valuable specimens as possible."
With special permission from the Beijing Institute, Zhao sectioned
two arm and two leg bones from 16 individual dinosaurs, ranging in age
from less than one year to 10 years old, or fully-grown. He did the
intricate sectioning work in a special palaeohistology laboratory in
Bonn, Germany,
The one-year-olds had long arms and short legs, and scuttled about on
all fours soon after hatching. The bone sections showed that the arm
bones were growing fastest when the animals were ages one to three
years. Then, from four to six years, arm growth slowed down, and the leg
bones showed a massive growth spurt, meaning they ended up twice as
long as the arms, necessary for an animal that stood up on its hind legs
as an adult.
Professor Xing Xu of the Beijing Institute, one of Dr Zhao's thesis
supervisors, said: "This remarkable study, the first of its kind, shows
how much information is locked in the bones of dinosaurs. We are
delighted the study worked so well, and see many ways to use the new
methods to understand even more about the astonishing lives of the
dinosaurs."
Professor Mike Benton of the University of Bristol, Dr Zhao's other
PhD supervisor, said: "These kinds of studies can also throw light on
the evolution of a dinosaur like Psittacosaurus. Having
four-legged babies and juveniles suggests that at some time in their
ancestry, both juveniles and adults were also four-legged, and Psittacosaurus and dinosaurs in general became secondarily bipedal."