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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Over 100 fossilised eggs of dinosaur found in MP
2007-02-05
In a remarkable feat, three amateur explorers have stumbled upon more than 100 fossilised eggs of dinosaurs in Madhya Pradesh. The eggs, belonging to the Cretaceous Era (approximately 144 to 65 million years ago), have been discovered in Kukshi-Bagh area of Dhar district, some 150 kms south-west of Indore.
I find the idea of dinosaurs interesting from an ecological point of view. Think of the ecosystem thatwould be required to support animals that were 90 feet long and traveling in herds. Unless the population was very sparse, it would imply a growing season to be measured in days, weeks at the outside: warmer than today, but also more moisture. Otherwise, a herd of 90 footers grazing continuously would make a plague of locusts look benign.
The rare find is a significant step in the study of the pre-historic life in Narmada Valley. "All the eggs were discovered from a single nesting site in a start to end exploration for 18 hours at the site in Kukshi-Bagh area, 40 kms from Manavar. As many as 6-8 eggs were found per nests," an excited Vishal Verma of the Mangal Panchayatan Parishad, a group of amateur explorers, told Hindustan Times from near the site. "The eggs are from upper cretaceous era when the dinosaurs were yet to be extinct. These eggs can be categorised in three types of soropaud dinosaurs, which were herbivorous. These animals used to come from far away areas to lay eggs on the sandy banks of the rivers in this area, identified scientifically as Lameta bed," Verma said. The dinosaurs were 40-90 feet in length, he added.

Along with the fossilised eggs, the team - comprising two other members Rajesh Chouhan and Govind Verma - also discovered footprints of the dinosaurs through which they could also trace the 'track way' of the heavy animals now extinct.
Posted by:Fred

#17  Jeebus, Frank. Ovaries and Helen Thomas...3 words that should NOT go together in a sentence.

Now, who has the steel wool™ to scrub my mental image of that away?
Posted by: BA   2007-02-05 21:44  

#16  of coarse
Posted by: Frank G   2007-02-05 20:51  

#15  teh? You must be raelly smart.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2007-02-05 20:08  

#14  teh.....? shit
Posted by: Frank G   2007-02-05 19:14  

#13  from teh title, I figured Helen Thomas did an ovary dump...
Posted by: Frank G   2007-02-05 19:14  

#12  A story a couple of weeks ago said they found a huge supply of ancient stone cannonballs in Syria. Someone better check 'em again. They might be dinosaur eggs.
Posted by: Penguin   2007-02-05 19:11  

#11  

• The richest dinosaur field in India is in the "Deccan Traps" near Jabalpur in Madhya Pradesh.

• About 65 million years ago, a huge mass of volcanic rock erupted from the earth, covering 500,000 sq km in Maharashtra and MP with lava 2 km high. This is exactly the time when all large dinosaur species became extinct.

• A small but ferocious dinosaur, about the size of adult humans, was named Jubbulpuria after it was found in Jabalpur by Matley in 1933.


This also buried some of the richest potential oil reservoirs in India below kilometers of basalt
Posted by: john   2007-02-05 17:09  

#10  Brawwwwwwwk! Gimme the damn triceratops! Brawwwwwwwk!
Posted by: eLarson   2007-02-05 16:57  

#9  As to the warm-blooded/cold-blooded argument, it's become pretty clear that dinosaurs may have been an intermediate step with degrees of both.

Lifestyle-wise, the dinosaurs lived and flourished as if they were warm-blooded, but there is some data that suggests they may have been cold-adapted in certain ways that some cold-blooded animals and insects are (there are reports of some species of beetles flying during snowstorms and it is well-known that insects can maintain activity at temperatures far below freezing in some species).

It's most readily assumed that dinosaur physiologies were probably extremely similar to that of birds.

Posted by: FOTSGreg   2007-02-05 16:12  

#8  Actually, global CO2 levels were likely much lower. It was global O2 levels that were much higher.

There have actually been several periods of higher global O2 levels - the late Permian/early Carboniferous and the late Jurassic/early Cretaceous are two of the most notable with global O2 levels as high as 31% during the earlier period and about 25-27% during the second.

It is believed that this is also what allowed the known periods of giantism in animals, most notably insects.

Posted by: FOTSGreg   2007-02-05 16:08  

#7  Do scientists know if the dinosaurs were cold-or warm blooded? last I heard they were cold-blooded, but school's been many years ago?
Posted by: Redneck Jim   2007-02-05 15:43  

#6  That's it, BrerRabbit! A U.N. grant to "study" your theory is coming up!
Posted by: BA   2007-02-05 14:46  

#5  Methane is a much more prevalent molecule and has a greater effect on atmospheric warming the carbon dioxide. I postulate that the dinosaurs grew to enormous size and multiplied in great numbers numbers. This graet race then migrated to an area overgrown with gigantic white beans. The rest is obvious.
Posted by: BrerRabbit   2007-02-05 12:21  

#4  Presumably atmospheric carbon dioxide levels were higher then, too, Fred.

Much of the fossil fuels we're burning are the carbon trapped (from the atmosphere) by plants of that era and earlier.
Posted by: Rob Crawford   2007-02-05 11:18  

#3  You would need global warming to support a terrarium full of dinosaurs.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2007-02-05 11:02  

#2  I thought this was another George Galloway story...
Posted by: Seafarious   2007-02-05 10:47  

#1  Presumably atmospheric carbon dioxide levels were higher then, too, Fred.
Posted by: trailing wife   2007-02-05 10:29  

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