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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
National
Adithi Ramakrishnan

Scientists unravel mystery of strange ‘mummified’ dinosaur with hooves

Researchers have unearthed a spooky pair of dinosaur mummies that appear to have been preserved in an unexpected way.

These dinosaur remains are different from the wrapped mummies of Egypt or natural human mummies that get accidentally preserved in bogs or deserts. Mummified dinosaurs are so old that their skin and soft tissues fossilise. Scientists use these rare remnants, along with dinosaur bones, to recreate what these prehistoric creatures may have looked like.

Scientists have been uncovering dinosaur mummies for over a century. Some were buried quickly after dying, while others sank into bodies of water or dried out.

Many of them, including a duck-billed dinosaur mummy discovered in 1908, hail from an area in eastern Wyoming, US. In the new study, scientists returned to this so-called mummy zone and found new remains, including the mummy of a duck-billed dinosaur that was only a few years old when it died.

“This is the first juvenile of a dinosaur that really is mummified,” said Paul Sereno, a University of Chicago palaeontologist involved in the discovery.

Surprisingly, the new mummies seem to have been preserved without any evidence of fossilised skin. Instead, they left impressions of their skin and scales on a thin layer of clay that hardened with help from microbes.

This style of mummification has preserved other organisms before, but scientists didn't think it could happen on land. It’s possible that other mummies found at the Wyoming site could have formed in a similar way, Mr Sereno said.

Scientists used these clay templates to paint a clearer picture of what the duck-billed dinosaurs might have looked like when they were alive, including spikes on their tail and hooves on their feet. The new findings were published on Thursday in the journal Science.

Understanding how dinosaur mummies form can help scientists uncover more of them. It's important to look not just for dinosaur bones, but also for skin and soft tissue impressions that could go unstudied or even picked away, said Mateusz Wosik, a Misericordia University palaeontologist who wasn't involved with the discovery.

More mummies offer more insights into how these creatures grew and lived.

“Every single time we find one, there's such a treasure trove of information about these animals,” said Stephanie Drumheller, a vertebrate palaeontologist at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, who wasn't part of the study.

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