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Reproductive riddle unscrambled [Fossilized eggs found inside dinosaur supports a link with birds]
The Globe and Mail ^ | 4/15/05 | By DAWN WALTON

Posted on 04/15/2005 6:39:50 AM PDT by doc30

Reproductive Riddle Unscrambled

A pair of fossilized eggs found inside pelvis of dinosaur supports a link with birds

Friday, April 15, 2005 Updated at 8:30 AM EST From Friday's Globe and Mail

Calgary — Scientists have for the first time discovered fossilized eggs inside the body of a dinosaur, which provides concrete clues about ancient reproduction and supports the theory that birds evolved from dinosaurs, according to research published today. The pair of hard-shelled eggs about the size of large, long yams were found inside the pelvis of a female oviraptorid, a meat-eating bipedal dinosaur that lived about 80 million years ago.

I was completely stunned," said the University of Calgary's Darla Zelenitsky, an expert in dinosaur reproductive biology, who was brought in to study the specimen found three years ago in China's southern Jiangxi province.

Never before have complete eggs been discovered inside a fossilized dinosaur, but there has been much speculation about whether dinosaurs laid numerous eggs at once like crocodiles or produced one egg at a time like birds.

A report published in today's issue of the journal Science finally puts an end to that debate.

"There's always been two camps among paleontologists: those that believe birds came from dinosaurs and those that believe birds came from other reptiles," Dr. Zelenitsky, the report's co-author, said. "But this provides further evidence that birds are from dinosaurs."

While crocodiles can lay 20 to 60 eggs at a time, it takes a modern-day chicken 25 to 30 hours to produce and lay one egg. That's because both oviducts, or Fallopian tubes, in reptiles produce many eggs at once, but in birds, only one oviduct is operating to produce one egg at a time.

"This specimen showed that these dinosaurs were more like birds in that they were laying one egg at a time," Dr. Zelenitsky said. ". . . but in this dinosaur, both the oviducts were functional like in crocodiles, but each oviduct was only producing one egg."

Previous discoveries of dinosaur nests of eggs or clutches have appeared as though the creatures laid their eggs in pairs but, until now, scientists had no proof that was the case. In fact, many denied the possibility that eggs were laid in pairs.

Renowned dinosaur hunter Philip Currie of the Royal Tyrrell Museum in Drumheller, Alta., pointed out that the only resolution to that dispute was the remote chance of discovering eggs inside a body cavity.

Uncovering this oviraptorid specimen, he said, is essentially like finding the "smoking gun."

Report co-author Tamaki Sato of the Canadian Museum of Nature in Ottawa said scientists finally have some answers about how dinosaurs laid eggs.

"This supports the bird-dinosaur relationship," she added.

The eggs studied are 18 centimetres long and six centimetres in diameter and are covered with ridges and bumps. While protected by a hard shell like bird eggs, rather than a leathery one as in reptiles, these eggs are neither bird-like nor crocodile-like in appearance.

Oviraptorids were toothless, short-beaked creatures that weighed about 40 kilograms and were about two metres long. They were also initially thought to be the egg-stealers of the Upper Cretaceous period.


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: bird; crevolist; dinosaur; dinosaurs; egg; evolution; fossil; ggg; godsgravesglyphs; oviraptorid; paleontology; science
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To: PatrickHenry; Ichneumon
"[Thunderous applause!]

I heartily agree.

Very impressive.

61 posted on 04/15/2005 9:01:57 AM PDT by b_sharp (Science adjusts theories to fit evidence, creationism distorts evidence to fit the Bible.)
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To: Ichneumon
You see, it's actually all the work of Loki, the Norse trickster god, who has not only planted all this bogus "evidence" of evolution....

This should obviously be taught in public schools.

Teach the controversy!

62 posted on 04/15/2005 9:05:51 AM PDT by gdani
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To: Ichneumon

Thanks. Very imformative post.


63 posted on 04/15/2005 9:06:19 AM PDT by BikerNYC
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To: doc30
I'm still waiting for thier answer as to why the dinosaurs perished in the Flood, but not the birds or reptiles. I guess dinosaurs must have been sinful and deserved destruction.

A creationist on one of these threads proposed that Noah and his family ate the dinosaurs after the Flood. They were on the Ark, but Noah decided to barbecue them after the Flood.

Oh, and before humans were kicked out of the Garden of Eden, T-Rex was a herbivore.

64 posted on 04/15/2005 9:06:38 AM PDT by Modernman ("I'm in favor of limited government unless it limits what I want government to do."- dirtboy)
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To: doc30
And please, no Helen Thomas pictures!

Killjoy

65 posted on 04/15/2005 9:08:33 AM PDT by null and void (RFID - It's all in the wristâ„¢...)
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To: Ichneumon

bttt for later


66 posted on 04/15/2005 9:10:15 AM PDT by I got the rope
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To: Ichneumon

"It's always funny listening to creationists try to explain Archaeopteryx. The reason it's so funny is that half of them declare it to be "obviously" just a bird -- and the other half declare it to be "obviously" just a reptile."

Huh? I've never heard anyone say the Archaeopteryx was a reptile.

But I do, however, find it hilarious when Darwinists try to explain evolution, because half say it's a gradual change over time(Like in “Origin of Species”), and half say whole phyla somehow evolved overnight(Punctuated Equilibrium)! It’s hilarious how a “theory” that’s been “proven correct” with soooo many “facts” can have two completely different—and mutually exclusive—definitions!

That’s a real knee-slapper!


67 posted on 04/15/2005 9:10:40 AM PDT by Strider4
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To: jbloedow
P.S. I deliberately omitted "flying" squirrels. If they ain't transitioned yet, they ain't transitional.

So, you don't see that gliding squirrels are a species in between regular squirrels and what will eventually be true flying squirrels?

68 posted on 04/15/2005 9:13:20 AM PDT by Modernman ("I'm in favor of limited government unless it limits what I want government to do."- dirtboy)
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To: Maceman
"I didn't think there were any scientist left who didn't accept that modern birds are nothing but legacy dinosaurs."

Apparently, that belief was not as widespread as many had thought, or perhaps this particular scientist was out of the loop as far as the party line goes. He did say he was stunned.

69 posted on 04/15/2005 9:14:13 AM PDT by MEGoody (Ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.)
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To: frgoff

"What part of D.Sc. in mathematics and B.S. in applied mathematics did you not understand?

Considering evolution is nothing if not a grand study in the mathematics of probability, I think he's eminently qualified to comment on the mathematical probabilities involved in various evolutionary just-so stories biologists bandy about."

No, you see, like all liberals, if you're not apart of the club, you're not entitiled to criticize them.

Freepers who uncovered the forged CBS docs weren't journalists, they're pajama wearing amateurs who aren't to be taken seriously!

Darwinists--like all liberals--know they can't win in an honest contest of ideas so they come up with their own brand of entrance qualifications to keeps us peons out of their way.


70 posted on 04/15/2005 9:16:33 AM PDT by Strider4
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To: jbloedow

"This is cool. Now remind me, how many separate times did flight evolve? Insects, one. Pterosaurs, that's two. Birds, that's three. Bats (mammals), oh darn, thats' four now. I think I'm missing one, but let's say four."

Not only that, but how many species from different genera and phyla have eyes? Millions? And they all "evolved" within a 5 million year window! That's some fast evolution!


71 posted on 04/15/2005 9:20:37 AM PDT by Strider4
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To: Modernman

"A creationist on one of these threads proposed that Noah and his family ate the dinosaurs after the Flood."

Well they were poultry weren't they?


72 posted on 04/15/2005 9:22:54 AM PDT by Strider4
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To: Strider4

I think the duckbills might be pretty tasty. And the ceratopsoids would probably taste a lot like beef.


73 posted on 04/15/2005 9:24:40 AM PDT by Modernman ("I'm in favor of limited government unless it limits what I want government to do."- dirtboy)
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To: Oztrich Boy
Dr. McIntosh is Reader in Combustion Theory, Department of Fuel and Energy,

I wonder if he believes in phlogiston.

74 posted on 04/15/2005 9:25:56 AM PDT by RightWingAtheist (Creationism is not conservative!)
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To: Verginius Rufus

The sauropod Astrodon was officially named Maryland's state dinosaur.


75 posted on 04/15/2005 9:28:54 AM PDT by RightWingAtheist (Creationism is not conservative!)
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To: Ichneumon

"What I do mind is when they try to use religious beliefs to "explain away" science."

Exactly, science like archeology. I really hate it when Darwinists use their religion to try and explain away the fossil record which contains no transitional fossils (And no, just because you a have jpg that says they're TF, doesn't make it so. No TF have EVER been found.) or any evidence at all of evolution.

Or science like biology which has proven--since the days of Pasteur--that spontaneous generation DOESN'T EXIST!

Or the science of physics which has proven through the laws of thermodynamics that things go from order to chaos, not chaos to order. Which is why when you've exposed to massive amount or mutagens you don't turn into the Hulk or any ubermensch--you die.

Science has shown that evolution is a fraud, but you religious wackos just won't let it go.


76 posted on 04/15/2005 9:30:25 AM PDT by Strider4
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To: crail; bvw; frgoff; PatrickHenry; Oztrich Boy
[The part where he knows squat about biology or paleontology...]

I'm finishing a Ph.D. in applied mathematics. I'm a little offended you think I must know nothing about everything aside from mathematics.

I made no such statement, nor is that what I think.

There are mathematicians in our department who study evolution.

Good -- then they won't say things on the subject as stupid as McIntosh's.

Look, you're missing my point... If McIntosh's statements on biology (or any other field) were accurate and insightful, I wouldn't care if he was a janitor by profession.

*However*, when bvw/frgoff wave around a quote from someone, *and* puff up their chests about how we should be impressed by the guy's credentials and (by implication fall down in awe and accept the Obvious Truth Of The Expert's Utterance), it's certainly appropriate to point out that a degree in *mathematics* doesn't necessarily make one an Authority(tm) on biology -- especially in a case like this, where it's obvious (due to his goofy and false claims) that the guy in question really *doesn't* know squat about biology. And this is even moreso the case when it's clear that they couldn't find a specialist in the *actual* field in question, they had to go far afield to unearth someone clueless enough to agree with them.

Mathematicians *can* know biology, of course -- but *this* one doesn't. Nor does a mathematics degree *necessarily* make someone an expert/authority on biology or any other field (not even their own, since there are plenty of incompetents who have managed to get a degree). That's why "argument by authority" is a fallacy in the first place -- "authorities" often aren't, and even true "authorities" can still screw up on any given point.

Finally, even if the guy's degree(s) *had* been in biology, even *that* wouldn't make the guy's claim any more valid or immune to scrutiny. Creationists seem to rely heavily on "authority" (which is probably why they like to "quote-mine" so much), but they utterly miss the point -- what matters in science is not *who* says something, but *what* they say, and whether it matches the evidence and can pass verification/falsification tests. Creationists invoke "argument by authority" just about all the time, without realizing how irrelevant it is, or how science is actually conducted and how scientific points are actually resolved. I suspect the reason is that the creationists themselves don't have the knowledge necessary to properly critique a claim themselves (if they did, they wouldn't remain creationists for long) -- so they're reduced to just choosing which "experts" they want to believe, no matter how lopsided the argument may actually be.

By the way, what is it that you do exactly, and how does knowing nothing outside your specialty qualify you to evaluate this research so quickly?

See above. The thing that qualifies me to "evaluate this research" is that I *do* know quite a bit about evolutionary biology. And note that unlike bvw/frgoff, I am *not* trying to substitute alleged "credentials" for actually being able to make a case that doesn't fall apart at the first glance.

77 posted on 04/15/2005 9:30:43 AM PDT by Ichneumon
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To: RightWingAtheist

Indeed. He's tried to measure it as it moves through the aether during combustion.


78 posted on 04/15/2005 9:30:54 AM PDT by BikerNYC
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To: Ichneumon
Ignoring supernatualist liberals works.
79 posted on 04/15/2005 9:37:03 AM PDT by ASA Vet (FR needs a Science Forum.)
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To: Strider4
Or the science of physics which has proven through the laws of thermodynamics that things go from order to chaos, not chaos to order.

Oh, lord. Don't speak, please.

The general rule to which you refer is statistical, it is not rooted in the laws of thermodynacis. Systems, on average, tend to move from order to chaos, but they don't have to.

Here's an experiment. Rip the first four pages out of a book. As you hold them, they are in an ordered state. If they are two-sided pages, the pages run from 1-8 in order. Now mix them up. You have just made the system of pages disordered. Fine. Now, throw the pages up in the air. Will they ever land so that pages 1, 3, 5, and 7 are facing up in a line? Sure they will, now and then. You have just made order from chaos. Do you think you've violated some law of physics by doing this?
80 posted on 04/15/2005 9:37:53 AM PDT by BikerNYC
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