Discovery of a fossil of a mammal storming a dinosaur – rts.ch

2023-07-18 20:04:13

A badger-sized mammal was sinking its fangs into the ribs of a dinosaur three times its size when the two were frozen in ash from a volcanic eruption 125 million years ago. This wrestling scene was discovered as a very well-preserved fossil in China.

This suggests that small mammals might attack the dinosaurs that dominated the fauna of the Cretaceous period, explain researchers in the journal Scientific Reports published on Tuesday.

This is the first time that a fossil has been discovered showing the fight between a mammal and a dinosaur, according to Jordan Mallon, paleontologist at the Canadian Museum of Nature, who co-authored the study led by Chinese scientists. Upon discovering the fossil, “I mightn’t believe my eyes,” he told AFP.

Mammals were previously considered too small to attack dinosaurs during the few tens of millions of years they lived together. But the fossil shows a Repenomamus robustus dominating a Psittacosaurus lujiatunensis, a four-foot-tall herbivore with a parrot-like beak.

You can clearly make out the mammal – one of the largest of its time but weighing only a third of the dinosaur – which has sunk its sharp fangs into the ribs of its prey while clutching its hind leg.

“Fiery Mammals”

The way the two skeletons are intertwined shows that the mammal was not feeding on the corpse of a dinosaur, according to Jordan Mallon. “The dinosaur collapsed and stuck a hind leg of the mammal in the hollow of its knees”, which suggests an attack by the mammal, notes the paleontologist.

The skeleton of the dinosaur bears no other bite marks, which would be typical of those left by an animal that has devoured carrion.

While it is rare for mammals to attack animals much larger than themselves, an example still exists today, with the wolverine which was observed attacking a caribou, much larger than itself. The fossil might not determine whether Repenomamus robustus hunted alone or in packs.

Discovery made in “Chinese Pompeii”

The two skeletons, almost complete, were discovered in 2012 in Liaoning, a province in northeastern China. The site, dubbed “Chinese Pompeii”, is home to numerous remains of dinosaurs and other animals preserved in volcanic debris similar to that of the ancient Roman city.

A first fossil discovered in 2005 suggested that mammals might feed on dinosaurs. It showed that a small Psittacosaurus had ended up in the stomach of a Repenomamus.

But this new fossil is the first proof that “there existed at least some fiery mammals, around the Cretaceous (…), capable of bringing down an adult dinosaur”, according to Jordan Mallon. The discovery will be exhibited in the museum of a primary school in the Chinese city of Weihai.

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