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More than a century ago prolific fossil collector Charles Sternberg discovered the skeleton of a duck-billed Edmontosaurus dinosaur in the sandstone rocks of the Lance Formation in eastern Wyoming. The remains were covered in fossilized flesh and skin, making it the first "dinosaur mummy" ever found. Two years later Sternberg would find another one just a few kilometers away.
New research reveals, however, that the skin found on newly discovered duck-billed dinosaur "mummies" from the same area -- and maybe Sternberg's as well -- aren't fossilized flesh at all but clay molds welded by microbes as the creatures decayed.
"That's going to come as a shocker to a lot of people," says University of Chicago paleontologist Paul Sereno, lead author of the new study, published in Science. This clay molding process was known to preserve the form of soft animals in oxygen-poor areas, such as the muds at the bottom of lagoons and deep-sea trenches, Sereno says. But "no one imagined it could work its magic on a dinosaur buried suddenly by sand in a flooded river," an environment that is fairly oxygen-rich.
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When "mummified" in this way, all of an animal's outside soft tissues become films of clay less than 1 millimeter thick. Sereno proposes that the creatures' carcasses were first desiccated in a drought before suddenly being engulfed by sediment -- likely brought on by a flood. A layer of bacteria latched onto the wet, porous surface to form a biofilm, which attracted surrounding clay. Then, weeks after they were buried, the soft parts of the carcasses decayed and were washed away by groundwater, leaving the clay mask to forever preserve the forms of what lay just beneath, Sereno says.
"The sort of basic [fossilization] question of 'How did this thing fossilize in the first place?' hasn't received as much attention in the past," says Stephanie Drumheller, a paleontologist at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville, who was not involved in the study but is mentioned in its acknowledgments section. "I think this was a really great deep dive into this one area where we do see several specimens."
Sereno and other researchers have managed to uncover many more mummies near Sternberg's original Wyoming site. These have included a Triceratops horridus and a Tyrannosaurus rex, along with two more E. annectens that were described for the first time in the new study. All are within a 10-kilometer diameter of one another in an area Sereno calls the "mummy zone."
One of these E. annectens was two years old when it died and the other five to eight years old -- making them a "late juvenile" and "early adult" that the researchers named "Ed, Jr." and "Ed, Sr.," respectively. Ed, Jr., the "late juvenile," is the first adolescent dinosaur mummy ever found and the first large dinosaur with a fully preserved fleshy outline of its trunk. Meanwhile Ed, Sr., the "early adult," is the first dinosaur of its kind to have been found with a full set of spikes running along its tail, and it has the earliest known hooves of any four-footed animal.
The researchers used a series of methods involving x-rays, CT scans, and microscopic and chemical analyses to ensure that the fleshy parts were indeed just a clay molding. This process is painstaking, and the clay on many previous specimens has been inadvertently damaged or removed during preparation.
"They were coming at this question from a lot of different angles," Drumheller says, "to figure out what the history of this fossil was, how this thing became a fossil in the first place -- and then tying that in to the unusual conditions that seem to have been around in this environment where they have found so many mummy fossils."
"The question now before us," Sereno says, "is whether this clay mask preservation process applies to the other dinosaur mummies and skin renderings that have been found at many other sites around the world."