By Mike|2023-10-27T07:20:56+01:00August 6th, 2018|General Teaching|Comments Off on A Successful Dinosaur and Fossil Workshop
Dinosaur and Fossil Workshop Success
Recently, Everything Dinosaur team members were invited up to the beautiful Beacon Museum at Whitehaven, Cumbria, to participate in the Museum’s “Dino Fest”, a weekend of activities focusing on all things dinosaur. The Beacon Museum is holding a dinosaur inspired exhibition for the summer months with lots of family friendly activities. On the Friday afternoon, Everything Dinosaur hosted a special meeting of the Museum’s “Quantum Leap” club. We looked at fossils including dinosaur bones and the children got the chance to find and take home their own fossils, including pieces of fossilised dinosaur bone.
Everything Dinosaur and Fossil Workshops
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
Fossil Casting
During our work with the enthusiastic “Quantum Leap” club members we got the budding young scientists to have a go at casting their own museum quality replicas. Over the course of the weekend, we held a number of dinosaur and fossil workshops and lots of fossils were found and some amazing casts were made.
Well done to Joe and Tom for making such a superb cast from one of our Late Cretaceous ammonite fossils from Canada.
Fossil Casting Workshops
In total, Everything Dinosaur held three two-hour long fossil workshops and numerous, shorter fossil hunting activities.
A spokesperson from Everything Dinosaur, who participated in the weekend of dinosaur-themed activities commented:
“It was great to meet all the eager and enthusiastic, young dinosaur fans at The Beacon Museum over the weekend. We all had a great time hunting for fossils, helping to make fossil casts and answering all their questions about dinosaurs.”
Visit the award-winning, user-friendly Everything Dinosaur website: Everything Dinosaur.
Nichollssaura borealis – Shaking its Neck from Side to Side
The long-necked plesiosaurs (Plesiosauroidea), are characterised (unsurprisingly), by their long necks, which in the case of the elasmosaurids were taken to extremes with some Late Cretaceous species having necks around seven metres in length, comprising 76 cervical vertebrae, but how did a plesiosaur use their necks? What degree of movement did these long necks have? These are questions that have been debated by palaeontologists for nearly two hundred years.
New research, published this week by the Royal Society, sheds light on the flexibility and neck movement in one plesiosaur, the Early Cretaceous leptocleidid Nichollssaura borealis.
The Fossilised Skeleton of a Jurassic Plesiosaur
Picture credit: Everything Dinosaur
Defining the Plesiosauria Clade
The Plesiosauria clade was very successful, originating in the Triassic and persisting until the very end of the Cretaceous. This clade is split into three distinct groups, although palaeontologists debate the phylogeny between the Plesiosauria clade members.
The Plesiosauroidea – the long-necked marine reptiles, epitomised by short tails, broad bodies, four flippers, a small head and an elongated neck.
Pliosauridae – the short-necked plesiosaurs, with large heads, broad bodies, four flippers and much shorter necks than the Plesiosauroidea.
The Rhomaleosauridae – a sort of half-way house between the other two, typically possessing longer necks and smaller heads relative to the Pliosauridae, but have shorter necks and larger heads when compared to members of the Plesiosauridae. Most known rhomaleosaurids are confined to the Early to Middle Jurassic of Europe, with most specimens assigned to this group having been found in England.
Studying One Member of the Plesiosauroidea – Nichollssaura borealis
The researchers from the Royal Tyrrell Museum and the University of Calgary, focused their study upon one specimen, a member of the Plesiosauroidea called Nichollssaura borealis. This specimen was chosen as it represents a very nearly complete individual and the fossil is not distorted or crushed to any degree which might have comprised any research into neck flexibility.
There were two further, more practical reasons why N. borealis was selected. Firstly, the specimen is housed at the Royal Tyrrell Museum and since one of the researchers involved in the study was Donald Henderson, a curator at the museum, accessing the specimen was not a problem. In addition, with a total length of 2.6 metres Nichollssaura could squeeze into the medical CT scanner that was being used to create accurate three-dimensional images of the bones.
Once the specimen had been CT scanned, the subsequent three-dimensional models that were produced could be examined so as to conclude the range of movement afforded by the 24 bones in the neck of this plesiosaur (24 cervical vertebrae).
The Research Team Tested the Range of Neck Movement Using Three-Dimensional Models
Picture credit: Royal Society Open Science
Sideways Movement of the Neck
When the three dimensional models of the Nichollssaura borealis neck were examined the scientists discovered that the neck of this plesiosaur was indeed very mobile, but their results suggest a preference for lateral (sideways) movements of the neck in this species. This supports the idea that these marine reptiles fed in or along the seafloor, using their small heads and long necks to probe into the sediment to find invertebrates and fish.
Unfortunately, no gut contents indicating potential prey have been preserved in association with the single fossil specimen of Nichollssaura, however, other researchers have found prey gut contents in other plesiosaurids that supports the idea that these animals fed by disturbing and catching animals that live on the sea floor (epifaunal).
To test the validity of the three-dimensional computer models, the scientists studied the range of neck movement in a extant species of monitor lizard, Dumeril’s monitor, a species from south-east Asia (Varanus dumerilii). This species was chosen as it has a relatively long neck for a monitor lizard and a preserved specimen was available for study.
The researchers conclude that if this species of plesiosaurid (N. borealis) had a neck that was adapted to rapid sideways movements then this probably evolved in relation to feeding method and prey capture. Different types of Plesiosauroidea with their different neck lengths very likely had different ecological roles within the ecosystem. This study also demonstrates that three-dimensional modelling is an effective tool for assessing function morphology for structures where no good, living analogue for comparison exists.