BEIJING, June 11 (Xinhuanet) -- Paleontologists often find dinosaur fossils
with heads thrown back, gaping mouths and tails curved toward the head and
assumed they died in water and the currents drifted the bones into that
position, or that rigor mortis or drying muscles, tendons and ligaments
contorted the limbs.
An example of the posture is the 150-million-year-old Archaeopteryx, the
first-known specimen of a feathered dinosaur and the proposed link between
dinosaurs and present-day birds.
"I'm reading this in the literature and thinking, 'This doesn't make any
sense to me as a veterinarian,'" said Cynthia Marshall Faux, a
veterinarian-turned-paleontologist at the Museum of the Rockies.
Faux (pronounced "fox") and a colleague say brain damage and asphyxiation
are the more likely culprits.
"Virtually all articulated specimens of Archaeopteryx are in this posture,
exhibiting a classic pose of head thrown back, jaws open, back and tail reflexed
backward and limbs contracted," said Kevin Padian, professor of integrative
biology and curator in the Museum of Paleontology at the University of
California, Berkeley. He and Faux published their findings last week in the
journal Paleobiology.
Some animals found in this death-throes posture may have suffocated in ash
during a volcanic eruption, consistent with the fact many fossils are found
in ash deposits, Faux and Padian explained. But many other possibilities exist,
including disease, brain trauma, severe bleeding, thiamine deficiency or
poisoning.
"This puts a whole new light on the mode of death of these animals, and
interpretation of the places they died in," Padian said. "This explanation gives
us clues to interpreting a great many fossil horizons we didn't understand
before and tells us something dinosaurs experienced while dying, not after
dying."
The posture appears to be a good indicator the animal was warm
blooded, as other research has suggested, because the posture has been seen
only in dinosaurs, pterosaurs and mammals, which are known or suspected to have
had high metabolic rates. Animals with lower metabolic rates, such as crocodiles
and lizards, use less oxygen and so might have been less traumatically affected
by hypoxia during death throes, Padian said.
(Agencies)