It is good to see the mixed nature of these huge herds been confirmed so powerfully in their sudden death. I suspect that the Therapods acted as the lions and simply followed these herds as they grazed. It is still a dramatic picture caught for an instant of time.
The size of this bone-yard is huge and we are getting multiple specimens which is often as important as any single specimen. Here we can make educated guesses regarding relative species densities even with some level comfort.
Alberta has become a treasure house of fossils that continues to surprise and impress..
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Massive dinosaur boneyard gives up its secrets
By Marty Klinkenberg, Edmonton Journal
Photograph by: Greg Southam
, Edmonton Journal
EDMONTON
- Scientists from around the world are marvelling over a staggering
deposit of dinosaur bones in Edmonton that is being likened to a jigsaw
puzzle from the Cretaceous period.
Discovered in the 1980s and
excavated painstakingly by researchers over the last eight summers, the
massive bone bed on the southern edge of the city includes the
fossilized remains of dozens of different types of dinosaurs that were
likely travelling together when they died more than 70 million years
ago.
“We have uncovered thousands of bones and teeth representing a
mixed population of dozens of animals, young and old,” Clive Coy, the
senior lab technician at the University of Alberta Laboratory for
Invertebrate Paleontology, said. “It looks like they were moving as a
herd when something killed and buried them.”
Revealed on Monday in
a special issue of the Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, the find is
so monumental that it will provide secrets about the lives of dinosaurs
for generations to come. Thus far, the site has yielded remains from
giant duck-billed Edmontonosaurs, large meat-eating Albertosaurs, two
small predators related to velociraptors, an ostrichlike ornithomimid,
and a horned dinosaur related to triceratops.
“We will continue
working on the site for our careers, and then years later researchers
will likely go back and collect data that we are not looking for today
and never even dreamed of,” said Coy, who helped recover and prepare
specimens and is among the authors whose work was published. “You
couldn’t uncover what’s there in a lifetime.”
The precise location
of the site is being kept secret to prevent vandalism, but Coy said it
stretches kilometres and covers an extinct riverbed. Bones have been
excavated there since 2006 by a team led by Philip Currie, the
University of Alberta’s Canada Research Chair in Dinosaur Paleontology.
Scientists
from around the world contributed to the special issue, including
paleontology students who conducted field work at the site and then
produced research projects based on their experiences. Some of the
fossils they collected are on display in downtown Edmonton at the
university’s galleries in Enterprise Square.
Coy said the discover
of fossilized remains of a triceratops is one of the biggest surprises,
along with teeth that apparently fell out as predators were ripping the
skin of smaller dinosaurs.
Although all of the animals are from
the same era, it is still unknown whether they died at the same time, or
if some were drawn to the site by the smell of rotting meat.
“We
have collected enough data that we had something definitive to say about
the site in a special volume,” Coy said. “We have benefited from
research conducted by people working on similar sites in Alaska, Montana
and Siberia, and felt it was our turn.
“We want to push the understanding of these animals forward.”
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