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A mummified dinosaur provides the first evidence the scaly animals had fleshy head ornaments, scientists say.
The preserved remains of the duck-billed dinosaur Edmontosauraus regalis were discovered in Alberta, Canada.Analysis revealed the previously unknown feature which experts compared to a rooster's comb. They suggest the ornaments were used to attract mates in the same way modern birds use bright appendages.
"This is the first evidence of an entirely soft-tissue crest for any dinosaur," said lead author Dr Phil Bell from the University of New England, Australia.
"Bony crests are well known but skin rarely fossilises and even when it does, it is almost never found on the skull."
rickymouse
reply to post by SLAYER69
I think there are a lot of mummified flesh remains that they dig through to get to the bones. The paleontologists are looking for bones, not flesh.
rickymouse
Some dinosaurs did live after the big event, ones that lived in caves....the forerunners of humans.
Akragon
reply to post by SLAYER69
Very cool!! S&F
Who's gonna be the first to clone a dinosaur...edit on 12-12-2013 by Akragon because: (no reason given)