India's Jurassic nest dug up in Tamil Nadu
 

Geologists in Tamil Nadu discover Dinosaur eggs. (TOI Photo)
 




 

Researchers from the Salem-based Periyar University found clusters of Dinosaur 
eggs. (TOI Photo) 
 




 

Geologists exhibit the dinosaur eggs on Wednesday. (TOI Photo)
 
 
COIMBATORE: Geologists in Tamil Nadu have stumbled upon a Jurassic treasure 
trove buried in the sands of a river bed. Sheer luck led them to Geologists 
exhibit the dinosaur eggs on Wednesday. 

Hundreds of fossilized dinosaur eggs, perhaps 65 million years old, underneath 
a stream in a tiny village in Ariyalur district. 

Researchers from the Salem-based Periyar University found clusters of eggs of 
what they believe to be the most aggressive Carnosaur and the docile, 
leaf-eating Sauropod at Sendurai village. 

While Carnosaurs were large predatory dinasaurs, Sauropods were long-necked, 
herbivores which grew to enormous heights and sizes. 

That dinosaurs once roamed the area was known from the fossils found there on 
earlier expeditions. But this is the first time that hundreds of nests embedded 
with hundreds of clusters of dinosaur eggs have been unearthed in the district. 

Located on the highway between Chennai and Tiruchi, the Ariyalur and the 
neighbouring Perambalur geological sites nestle in the northern plains of the 
Cauvery river. The place is a veritable museum of ancient organisms, dating 
back to 140 million years. Ever since a British couple -- the Wines -- 
collected 32 boxes of "strange stone objects" in 1843, the Ariyalur region has 
drawn geologists from across the world for its rich fossil presence and 
diversity. 

Scientists have found the tiniest marine algae or the nano fossils besides the 
rare shell-like bivalve, gastropoda, telecypoda and brachiopoda in the 
geological sites spread across 950sqkm in Ariyalur and Perambalur districts. 

"We found clusters and clusters of spherical eggs of dinosaurs. And each 
cluster contained eight eggs," says Dr M U Ramkumar, geology lecturer of the 
Periyar University. Each egg was about 13 to 20 cm in diameter and they were 
lying in sandy nests which were of the size of 1.25 metres. 

In the 1860s, a British geologist first recorded the presence of bone remains 
of dinosaurs in Ariyalur. Over a century and a half later, the egg of a 
dinosaur was found in a cement factory of the state-owned Tamil Nadu Cements 
Ltd in 1990s. But officials realized that it was a dinosaur egg only 10 years 
later. 

On a sultry afternoon on September 12 this year, Ramkumar and his research 
students went to Ariyalur to scour the rocks and sediments as part of a study 
funded by Indian and German scientific institutions. As they paused by a stream 
on a grazing land at Sendurai, they found spherical-shaped fossils peeping out 
of the sand beds. "We got really excited. As I have seen a dinosaur egg, I was 
sure these were dinosaur eggs," said Ramkumar. 

A quick digging revealed clusters of eggs beneath seven layers of sand spread 
over two sqkm. The eggs may not have hatched due to the Deccan volcanic 
eruptions or seasonal flooding, surmise the team. "We suspect the extinction of 
dinosaurs was triggered by the Deccan volcano. Volcanic ashes cap the eggs," 
said one researcher. 

"This is a very significant finding as never before have we found so many 
dinosaur eggs in the country. Besides the spherical size of the eggs covered 
with sand and volcanic ash provide significant insight into the possible 
reasons for extinction of the species," says Dr Jyotsana Rai, senior scientist, 
Birbal Sahni Institute of Paleobotany in Lucknow. Her team will collect samples 
of these eggs to determine its exact age. 

Because a similar discovery in Jabalpur led to a plunder of the fossilized 
treasure, the researchers have requested the Ariyalur district administration 
to cordon off the site. Samples of the eggs will travel to Germany for further 
research. The vicinity of Jabalpur in Madhya Pradesh is considered the richest 
dinosaur field in the country. 

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/news/india/Indias-Jurassic-nest-dug-up-in-Tamil-Nadu/articleshow/5073985.cms


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