With its big, hockey puck-sized eyes,
shortened face and nubby horns, it was
probably as cute as a button - at least
to its mother, a three-horned dinosaur
called
Triceratops that could weigh
as much as 10 tons and had one of the
largest skulls of any land animal on the
planet.
Visitors to the University of
California, Berkeley's Valley Life
Sciences Building now can judge for
themselves. A cast of the foot-long
skull from the youngest
Triceratops fossil ever
found is on display in the building's
Marian Koshland Bioscience and Natural
Resources Library. The actual skull,
also at UC Berkeley and in fragments, is
described by campus paleontologist Mark
Goodwin in the March issue of the
Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology.
Mounted in the library's entryway, the
diminutive skull, likely from a
year-old, three-foot-long baby, is
dwarfed by the more than six-foot-long
skull of a mature
Triceratops. Standing
menacingly outside the library's doors
is a life-size cast of
Triceratops' nemesis,
Tyrannosaurus rex.
Despite the pup's size, its remains are
telling Goodwin a lot about how
dinosaurs grew, the purpose of their
head ornaments and the characteristics
of their ancestors. In particular, since
the horns and frill are present from a
very early age, it is unlikely they were
used exclusively for sexual display, he
said.
"The baby
Triceratops confirmed our
argument that the horns and frill of the
skull likely had another function other
than sexual display or competition with
rivals, which people have often argued,
and allows us to propose that they were
just as important for species
recognition and visual communication in
these animals," Goodwin said.
Triceratops horridus
was a strictly North American dinosaur,
though ceratopsian relatives with
different but equally formidable
ornamentation roamed China and Mongolia
during the Cretaceous period, 65-144
million years ago. Adult
Triceratops could be nearly
10 feet tall and 26 feet long, with a
bony frill around the head that was as
wide as seven feet across. Two
three-foot horns typically curved
forward from the brow, while a third
horn erupted from the nose above a
narrow, horny beak.
The baby's skull, along with a few
vertebrae, teeth and bony tendons, were
discovered by amateur fossil hunter
Harley Garbani in 1997 in Montana's Hell
Creek Formation, the source of many
Triceratops and
T.
rex fossils. Garbani thought
he'd found the skull of a dome-headed
dinosaur, or pachycephalosaur, and sent
Goodwin a photo of the bones he had
reconstructed from hundreds of
fragments. But Goodwin immediately
recognized the bones that make up the
frill around the back of the head as
those of a very young
Triceratops and assembled
the fossil bones into a skull and lower
jaw that is missing only the nose and
beak.
The fossil skull, about 67 or 68 million
years old, has been a unique addition to
the world's existing, mostly adult
specimens of
Triceratops. And the
"yearling," as Goodwin called it, fits
perfectly into a study he is conducting
with Jack Horner of Montana State
University about the growth patterns of
Triceratops and other
dinosaurs.
Although Goodwin's conclusions about the
lifelong growth of
Triceratops will be
published later this year, the baby
skull offers its own insights. For one,
the surface of the skull shows grooves
were blood vessels used to be, evidently
to nourish a fingernail-hard covering of
keratin that was similar to the thicker
layer that covered the adult skull. Such
horny coverings are often brightly
colored in the living descendents of
dinosaurs - the birds - suggesting that
adult
Triceratops and their young
may have been colorful, too.
In addition, the scalloped edges of the
baby's frill became mere wavy edges in
the adults, although the scallops
foreshadowed the development of
triangular scales along the edge of the
adult frill, probably an attribute of
sexual maturity, Goodwin said. The two
brow horns started out straight and
short in the baby - they're about an
inch long - but ended up long and curved
forward in the adult, while the nose
horn became larger, like that of a
rhinoceros, although it was made of bone
in
Triceratops.
The brain case of the baby also changed
significantly, he said. Hidden beneath
the boney frills of the skull, the
hazelnut-sized brain of the baby fit
snugly within protective bones not yet
fused, so as to allow further brain
growth. In the adult, the brain, about
the shape and size of a small sweet
potato, was completely encased in fused
bones. The relative position of the
bones of the braincase as the animal
matured recapitulates the cranial
evolution of
Triceratops from a more
basal ancestor, such as
Protoceratops.
"The baby skull shows us how the bones
that make up the skull actually grew and
fit together, because we see the sutures
and sutural surfaces, which were
completely obliterated in the adults,"
he said.
Because of the good condition of the
bones, which show no gnawing, Goodwin
thinks the baby died and the skull was
buried before it could be scavenged or
the bones eroded away along an ancient
stream.
"It's an incredible specimen, with
beautiful preservation," he said.
Goodwin and Horner also have made casts
of the skull for the American Museum of
Natural History and for Montana's Museum
of the Rockies.
Goodwin continues his excavations in
Montana, concentrating on the dinosaurs
of the Lower Hell Creek Formation that
are slightly older than the
T.
rex and
Triceratops fossils from the
Upper Hell Creek Formation. His
coauthors on the new paper are William
A. Clemens, a UC Berkeley professor of
integrative biology and Museum of
Paleontology emeritus curator who opened
up the Montana area for fossil
exploration more than 30 years ago;
field colleague Horner of the Museum of
the Rockies at Montana State University
in Bozeman; and Kevin Padian, UC
Berkeley professor of integrative
biology and Museum of Paleontology
curator.
Source:
University of California - Berkeley
Published on 18th
MARCH 2006