Tubercuoolithus

Tubercuoolithus is an oogenus of dinosaur egg from the early Campanian of Montana.[1]

Tubercuoolithus
Temporal range: Campanian
Egg fossil classification
Oofamily: incertae sedis
Oogenus: Tubercuoolithus
Jackson and Varricchio, 2010
Oospecies
  • T. tetonensis Jackson and Varricchio, 2010 (type)

Distribution

Tubercuoolithus is so far known only from the Two Medicine Formation in Montana, which is dated to the Campanian. The fossils were found in Teton County, at a locality dated to 80 million years old.[1]

Discovery

Fossil eggs are very common at the Two Medicine Formation, including the eggs of Troodon and Maiasaura. However, until 2010 no eggs were known from the lower half of that formation. Then, two paleontologists at the University of Montana, Frankie D. Jackson and David J. Varricchio, discovered a fossil egg site at Sevenmile Hill near the base of the formation. These discoveries included Tubercuoolithus, and constituted the oldest fossil eggs known from the Two Medicine.[1]

Description

Tubercuoolithus is similar to the Mongolian elongatoolithids in that its eggshell is composed of calcite and has two layers, a mammillary layer and a cryptoprismatic layer. However, it has quite distinctive ornamentation; the outer surface of Tubercuoolithus's eggshell is covered with domed nodes, arranged in long wavelike patterns (anastomotuberculate)[2] or irregular chains (ramotuberculate).[2] The eggshell thickness (including ornamentation) ranges between 831 µm and 1186 µm. The cryptoprismatic layer is roughly three times thicker than the mammillary layer. The pores are thin and straight.[1]

Because it is known only from fragments, the size and shape of a complete Tubercuoolithus egg are unknown.[1]

Classification

It is uncertain which oofamily Tubercuoolithus should be classified in. It is similar in microstructure to Elongatoolithidae, but different in ornamentation. Its ornamentation is similar to that of Montanoolithus.[1]

gollark: Yes there is.
gollark: That is not very fun.
gollark: Storage-bus if you really must.
gollark: Just dump them as trash or store them in tanks.
gollark: Don't store them in your ME network!

References

  1. Jackson, Frankie; Varricchio, David (2010). "Fossil eggs and eggshell from the lowermost Two Medicine Formation of western Montana, Sevenmile Hill locality". Journal of Vertebrate Paleontology. 30 (4): 1142–1156. doi:10.1080/02724634.2010.483537.
  2. Carpenter, Kenneth (1999). Eggs, Nests, and Baby Dinosaurs: A Look at Dinosaur Reproduction (Life of the Past), Indiana University Press; ISBN 0-253-33497-7. p. 144
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