The moment we accept that dinosaurs were feathered, as was inevitable
for any land creature not immediately adjacent to water, then we need only
recall the viable range available to birds.
Penguins particularly push the envelop.
However here we have large herbivores that survived a cold winter season
and in these cases were caught in the spring floods.
At least now we know that they could and need no longer presume that
they were limited in the north at all any worse than present day mammels.
Thus while the KT event knocked out the large animal populations the
same way as the Pleistocene comet
knocked out the bulk of the large animals in the Ice Age temperate zone, the
successor populations were surely choked by the emergent mammalian populations
that likely went after dinosaur eggs. We
have watched island based ground based bird populations collapse for the same
reason.
Duck-Billed Dinosaurs Endured Long, Dark Polar Winters
ScienceDaily (Apr. 11, 2012) — Duck-billed dinosaurs that lived
within Arctic latitudes approximately 70 million years ago likely endured long,
dark polar winters instead of migrating to more southern latitudes, a recent
study by researchers from the University of Cape Town, Museum of Nature and
Science in Dallas and Temple University has found.
The researchers published their findings, "Hadrosaurs Were
Perennial Polar Residents," in the April issue of the journal The
Anatomical Record: Advances in Integrative Anatomy and Evolutionary Biology.
Anthony Fiorillo, a paleontologist at the Museum of Nature and Science,
excavated Cretaceous Period fossils along Alaska's North Slope. Most of the bones
belonged to Edmontosaurus, a duck-billed herbivore, but some others such as the
horned dinosaur Pachyrhinosaurus were also found.
Fiorillo hypothesized that the microscopic structures of the dinosaurs'
bones could show how they lived in polar regions. He enlisted the help of
Allison Tumarkin-Deratzian, an assistant professor of earth and environmental
science, who had both expertise and the facilities to create and analyze thin
layers of the dinosaurs' bone microstructure.
Another researcher, Anusuya Chinsamy-Turan, a professor of zoology at
the University of Cape Town, was independently pursuing the same analysis of
Alaskan Edmontosaurus fossils. When the research groups discovered the
similarities of their studies, they decided to collaborate and combine their
data sets to provide a larger sampling. Half of the samples were tested and
analyzed at Temple; the rest were done in South Africa.
"The bone microstructure of these dinosaurs is actually a record
of how these animals were growing throughout their lives," said
Tumarkin-Deratzian. "It is almost similar to looking at tree rings."
What the researchers found was bands of fast growth and slower growth
that seemed to indicate a pattern.
"What we found was that periodically, throughout their life, these
dinosaurs were switching how fast they were growing," said
Tumarkin-Deratzian. "We interpreted this as potentially a seasonal pattern
because we know in modern animals these types of shifts can be induced by
changes in nutrition. But that shift is often driven by changes in
seasonality."
The researchers questioned what was causing the dinosaurs to be under
stress at certain times during the year: staying up in the polar region and
dealing with reduced nutrition during the winter or migrating to and from lower
latitudes during the winter.
They did bone microstructure analysis on similar duck-billed dinosaur
fossils found in southern Alberta, Canada, but didn't see similar stress
patterns, implying that those dinosaurs did not experience regular periodic seasonal
stresses. "We had two sets of animals that were growing
differently," said Tumarkin-Deratzian.
Since the Alaska fossils had all been preserved in the same sedimentary
horizon, Fiorillo examined the geology of the bonebeds in Alaska where the samples
were excavated and discovered that these dinosaurs had been preserved in flood
deposits.
"They are very similar to modern flood deposits that happen in
Alaska in the spring when you get spring melt water coming off the Brooks
Mountain Range," said Fiorillo. "The rivers flood down the Northern
Slope and animals get caught in these floods, particularly younger animals,
which appear to be what happened to these dinosaurs.
"So we know they were there at the end of the dark winter period,
because if they were migrating up from the lower latitudes, they wouldn't have
been there during these floods," he said.
"It is fascinating to realize how much of information is locked in
the bone microstructure of fossil bones," said Chinsamy-Turan. "It's
incredible to realize that we can also tell from these 70 million-year-old
bones that the majority of the polar hadrosaurs died just after the winter
season."
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