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Dinosaur poop shows grass is older than it seems
seattlepi.com ^
| Friday, November 18, 2005
| By LAURAN NEERGAARD
Posted on 12/06/2005 9:03:21 AM PST by flevit
click here to read article
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1
posted on
12/06/2005 9:03:22 AM PST
by
flevit
To: DaveLoneRanger
2
posted on
12/06/2005 9:05:52 AM PST
by
flevit
To: flevit
A vegan diet, and yet-- they're still dead.
3
posted on
12/06/2005 9:06:49 AM PST
by
atomicpossum
(Replies should be as pedantic as possible. I love that so much.)
To: NYTexan; Bahbah; tiredoflaundry; defconw; FOXFANVOX
The truth is stranger than fiction ping
4
posted on
12/06/2005 9:07:39 AM PST
by
saveliberty
(The feed? Senator Ted thought it was part of the Big Dig. It's in the Esther Williams Tunnel now)
To: flevit
Something stinks in this story.
To: saveliberty; sauropod
Somebody needs to ping sauropod to this story.
6
posted on
12/06/2005 9:16:41 AM PST
by
Bahbah
(Free Scooter; Tony Schaffer for the US Senate)
To: flevit
So grass is literally older than dinosaur sh!t?
7
posted on
12/06/2005 9:16:42 AM PST
by
Pessimist
To: flevit
the scientific term is coprolites Well, they might have a scientific term for it, but I bet that when they're in their secret meetings behind closed doors when they think no one can hear them, they call it poop.
8
posted on
12/06/2005 9:22:15 AM PST
by
layman
(Card Carrying Infidel)
To: flevit
Dragon breath...that's what happens when you smoke grass~!! NOW I understand those dragon pictures!!!
9
posted on
12/06/2005 9:24:39 AM PST
by
Sacajaweau
(God Bless Our Troops!!)
To: flevit
Scientists like to make conjectures based on minimal fossil finds. We recently had a thread on dinosaur footprints. From the footprints, scientists knew the diet of the beast, the height of the beast, and the a few other things.
Sometimes that strikes me as over-reaching. The piece that seems most straight-forward is diet. Based on tooth shape, we should know something about what they ate. Then this comes along. Teeth indicate that they would not eat grass, but scat says they did.
Scientists know less than they think.
To: flevit
Whew!! What a relief. I have sweating out the age of grass for . . . . well, actually, this isn't a topic that is very high on my list of important things.
In fact, it doesn't even register.
11
posted on
12/06/2005 9:28:25 AM PST
by
DustyMoment
(FloriDUH - proud inventors of pregnant/hanging chads and judicide!!)
To: flevit
Stromberg and paleobotanists from India analyzed sauropod dung and found grasses...
Corn does the same thing to me.
12
posted on
12/06/2005 9:29:33 AM PST
by
CommandoFrank
(Peer into the depths of hell and there you will find the face of Islam...)
To: ClearCase_guy
Sometimes that strikes me as over-reaching. The piece that seems most straight-forward is diet. Based on tooth shape, we should know something about what they ate. Then this comes along. Teeth indicate that they would not eat grass, but scat says they did. Cats and dogs, both obligate carnivores, sometimes eat grass, for whatever reason.
Cats eat housplants to be mean.
We grew catnip, they ignored it and ate everything else.
To: atomicpossum
I remember reading in Scientic American back when it was still interesting to read that the comparative ratio of carnivores to herbivores among dinosaurs indicated that they were probably cold blooded. Warm blooded predators need a larger mass of vegans per pound of meat eater.
14
posted on
12/06/2005 9:30:40 AM PST
by
Lonesome in Massachussets
(NY Times headline: Protocols of the Learned Elders of CBS, Fake but Accurate, Experts Say)
To: ClearCase_guy
Sometimes that strikes me as over-reaching. The piece that seems most straight-forward is diet. Based on tooth shape, we should know something about what they ate. Then this comes along. Teeth indicate that they would not eat grass, but scat says they did. Cats and dogs, both obligate carnivores, sometimes eat grass, for whatever reason.
Cats eat housplants to be mean.
We grew catnip, they ignored it and ate everything else.
To: ClearCase_guy
Teeth indicate that they would not eat grass, but scat says they did. I've got plenty of stones that came out of dino stomachs that were used to grind food. Like birds, they had rocks do some of the digesetive work.
These stones look like they were tumbled round and polished. They are very easy to find in Utah.
16
posted on
12/06/2005 9:33:22 AM PST
by
CommandoFrank
(Peer into the depths of hell and there you will find the face of Islam...)
To: ClearCase_guy
Scientists like to make conjectures based on minimal fossil finds. We recently had a thread on dinosaur footprints. From the footprints, scientists knew the diet of the beast, the height of the beast, and the a few other things.Sounds like the crime lab tech on Hawaii Five-O. That guy could reconstruct the whole crime from a grain of sand.
17
posted on
12/06/2005 9:34:00 AM PST
by
Lawgvr1955
(You can never have too much cowbell !!)
To: ClearCase_guy
Scientists know less than they think.Don't tell them that! Scientists (and doctors) pretend to be impartial, but most are very defensive of their postulations and fall in love with their favorite theories. But they'll be the first to criticize religion for those very things.
To: flevit
didn't have the special kind of teeth needed to grind up abrasive blades.
Why do dogs eat grass?
19
posted on
12/06/2005 9:58:56 AM PST
by
Dallas59
(“You love life, while we love death"( Al-Qaeda & Democratic Party)
To: flevit
Were there bells in the poop, and did it smell like pepper spray?
20
posted on
12/06/2005 9:59:40 AM PST
by
MonroeDNA
(Look for the union label--on the bat crashing through your windshield!)
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