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James Lamb 919/515-6276 or jplamb@unity.ncsu.edu Editor's Note: B-roll footage and radio news actualities about this story are downloadable on the Web. The b-roll is at http://www.ncsu.edu/vnrs/; the news actualities are at http://www.ncsu.edu/radio_news/. Or contact News Services at (919) 515-3470 or newstips@ncsu.edu. Oct. 16, 2001 Student Discovers Well-Preserved Embryo in Dinosaur Egg FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Lamb detailed his finding earlier this month in Bozeman, Mont., at the annual meeting of the Society of Vertebrate Paleontology. He says it will be several more months before all the embryo's bones are revealed and his research is complete.
The 83-million-year-old
egg was originally discovered
by three high school students
in 1970, but scientists
at the time were unable
to accurately determine
its contents. A research
paper published in 1978
could not conclude exactly
what type of egg it is. Lamb discovered that it contained an embryo after he borrowed it from Auburn University for a research project. While studying a part of the egg which previously had been cut away, he noticed three tiny bones. On a subsequent trip to Alabama, he arranged with Dr. Prescott Atkinson, an immunologist at Children's Hospital at University of Alabama at Birmingham, to have CT scans taken of the egg. Atkinson was one of the three students who unearthed the egg back in 1970. The CT scans confirmed the embryo's presence and revealed the orientation of its bones. Lamb then began manually removing them, using a buffered acid bath to dissolve the surrounding rock. Lamb believes the embryo may yield new information about, among other things, dinosaurs' diets. "If you've got organic material present, which we apparently do in this case, you can apply isotopic techniques to learn about diet," he said. "We know that this guy was a vegetarian, but it's possible that isotopes will tell us if his mother ate ferns, conifers or hardwood vegetation." Only through an extraordinary set of circumstances did the egg survive, he says, since most dinosaur-age terrestrial deposits in the eastern United States have long since eroded. Lamb theorizes the egg was washed out to sea during an ancient hurricane. Eventually, the pores that supplied air to the embryo allowed sea water to fill the egg, and it sank, settling into chalk sediments on the ocean floor. Because chalk particles are so tiny, fossils preserved in them reveal much more delicate features than those preserved in grittier sediments. Chalk's alkalinity also helps buffer the fossils against destructive acids. The egg is believed to be the only one in the world preserved in marine sediments. Much of NC State's paleontology research focuses on the dinosaurian environment. In studying the egg, Lamb has determined that its home was much like the Outer Banks of North Carolina and that carbon dioxide levels in its atmosphere would have been four times higher than current levels. Such studies can reveal useful information about how higher carbon dioxide levels or global warming can affect our environment today, he says. Lamb's supervising professor is Dr. Dale Russell, research professor in the Department of Marine, Earth and Atmospheric Sciences in the College of Physical and Mathematical Sciences. Lamb is one of the department's first two doctoral students in geology with a concentration in paleontology, a program for the exploration of the dinosaurian world. This is a collaboration between NC State University and the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences in Raleigh. When Lamb's research is complete, the egg will be displayed at the N.C. Museum of Natural Sciences before being returned to the Auburn University Natural History Learning Center. -thomas -
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