Dinosaurs May Have Easten Grass

by VM44 8 Replies latest watchtower bible

  • VM44
    VM44

    Dinosaurs May Have Eaten Grass

    By LAURAN NEERGAARD, Associated Press Writer

    Imagine dinosaur terrain — full of ferns and palms, right? Better add some grass to that picture. A new discovery debunks the theory that grasses didn't emerge until long after the dinosaurs died off.

    Fossilized dung tells the story: The most prominent plant-eating dinosaurs were digesting different varieties of grass between 65 million and 71 million years ago, researchers report Friday in the journal Science.

    The earliest grass fossils ever found were about 55 million years old — from the post-dinosaur era.

    It's a big surprise for scientists, who had never really looked for evidence of grass in dino diets before. After all, grass fossils aside, those sauropods — the behemoths with the long necks and tails and small heads — didn't have the special kind of teeth needed to grind up abrasive blades.

    "Most people would not have fathomed that they would eat grasses," noted lead researcher Caroline Stromberg of the Swedish Museum of Natural History.

    Stromberg and a team of paleobotanists from India analyzed sauropod dung — the scientific term is coprolites — found in central India.

    The coprolites contained microscopic particles of silica called phytoliths, which form inside plant cells in distinctive patterns that essentially act as a signature.

    Amid the expected plants were numerous phytoliths certain to have come from the grass family, report Stromberg and Vandana Prasad of India's Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeobotany. They included relatives of rice and bamboo and forage-type grasses.

    They didn't eat a lot of grass, the evidence shows.

    But grasses must have originated considerably earlier, well over 80 million years ago, for such a wide variety to have evolved and spread to the Indian subcontinent in time to be munched by sauropods, they concluded.

    "These remarkable results will force reconsideration of many long-standing assumptions" about dinosaur ecology, wrote Dolores Piperno and Hans-Dieter Sues of the Smithsonian Institution's National Museum of Natural History in an accompanying review.

    Beyond the great curiosity about dinosaur life, the discovery has implications about the coevolution of this huge plant family — there are about 10,000 separate grass species — with other plant-eaters, Piperno explained.

    Indeed, a mysterious early mammal that roamed among the dinosaurs had more suitable teeth for grazing, raising the possibility of an early adaptation, the researchers note.

    Science: http://www.sciencemag.org/

  • Enigma One
    Enigma One

    When I read that it made me think of this......


  • VM44
    VM44

    When I read this article I thought of those dinosaurs that were pictured on the inside cover of the old green NWT. I liked them. :) --VM44

  • Leolaia
    Leolaia

    When I read this, it made me think of Sheena Easton as a dinosaur 80's act.

  • Enigma One
    Enigma One

    Darn it. This site is so user unfriendly sometimes.

    Here's the link instead.....


    http://flash.artie.com/rocker_bullmoose.swf

  • Lilycurly
    Lilycurly

    How does grass originating from 80 million years ago work out with the 6000 years theory? That's what I'm aksing myself

  • trevor
    trevor

    It’s more likely that Dinosaurs would have Eaten Ur-ass

  • Finally-Free
    Finally-Free

    I wonder if Jehovah would resurrect a couple of these guys to keep my lawn trimmed.

    W

  • Lilycurly
    Lilycurly

    Hihihihihi! *tries to think of a smart answer* *hahahahahaha!

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