The first dinosaur eggs were soft and leathery

A fossil of a Mussaurus egg. (Credit: Yale)

The first dinosaur eggs had a soft shell, researchers say.

For many years there was little fossil evidence of dinosaur eggs, and all known examples were characterized by thick, calcified shells—leading paleontologists to speculate that all dinosaur eggs were hard-shelled, like those of modern crocodiles and birds.

“These dinosaurs buried their eggs in clutches, like modern animals that lay soft eggs, such as many lizards, snakes, and turtles…”

In a new study in Nature, however, researchers used a novel geochemical approach to show that the earliest dinosaur eggs had soft, leathery shells.

The researchers analyzed new, embryo-bearing egg fossils ascribed to the dinosaurs Protoceratops and Mussaurus. The Protoceratops eggs are the first ever discovered for a horned dinosaur, while the Mussaurus eggs represent some of the earliest for a long-necked dinosaur.

Soft, white snapping turtle eggs have holes in them from hatching
Protoceratops and Mussaurus eggs would have looked similar to these snapping turtle eggshells, shown after hatching. The eggshell consists primarily of the leathery, proteinaceous shell membrane and lacks a thick, calcified external layer. (Credit: Jasmina Wiemann)

The researchers focused on the mineral and chemical compositions of the fossils, including a dark-colored halo surrounding the fossilized embryos.

“We looked for any residue of a protein eggshell membrane,” says co-corresponding author Jasmina Wiemann, a graduate student in the geology and geophysics department at Yale University.

“We essentially ‘fingerprinted’ a large number of modern and fossil samples to build a dataset of the overall molecular picture of the eggshell through time.”

“…in this case (their eggshells) early dinosaurs were more reptilian than bird-like in their reproductive behavior.”

The early dinosaur eggs, the researchers found, had a chemical residue that was non-mineralized—meaning they were more like today’s leathery turtle eggs, protecting their embryos with a soft outer covering.

Wiemann says this new information, along with previous research by a number of paleontologists about dinosaur nesting strategies, paints a clearer picture of early dinosaur nesting and parenting.

“These dinosaurs buried their eggs in clutches, like modern animals that lay soft eggs, such as many lizards, snakes, and turtles,” Wiemann says. “This kept the eggs moist and protected. It works very well.”

The researchers say the new discovery shows that the three main branches of dinosaurs—Ornithischia, Sauropodomorpha, and Theropoda—each started with soft eggshells. Hard, calcified eggshells evolved independently for each branch.

“By taking a step back and looking at the molecular data, we found that in this case (their eggshells) early dinosaurs were more reptilian than bird-like in their reproductive behavior,” co-corresponding author Matteo Fabbri, also a Yale paleontologist.

Additional researchers from the University of Buenos Aires, Montana State University, the Museo Paleontologico Egidio Feruglio, and the University of Calgary also contributed to the work. Mark Norell of the American Museum of Natural History (AMNH) is first author of the study.

Source: Yale University