PALEOBIOLOGY AND SKELETOCHRONOLOGY OF JURASSIC DINOSAURS: IMPLICATIONS FROM THE HISTOLOGY AND OXYGEN ISOTOPE COMPOSITIONS OF BONES

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dc.contributor.author Tütken T.
dc.contributor.author Vennemann T.W.
dc.contributor.author Pfretzschner H.-U.
dc.contributor.author Sun G.
dc.contributor.author Wang Y.D.
dc.date.accessioned 2022-11-08T06:07:41Z
dc.date.available 2022-11-08T06:07:41Z
dc.date.issued 2004
dc.identifier https://www.elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=14204638
dc.identifier.citation Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology, 2004, 206, 3-4, 217-238
dc.identifier.issn 0031-0182
dc.identifier.uri https://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/39592
dc.description.abstract Fossil biogenic phosphate of fast-growing primary bone tissue of dinosaurs can preserve a histologic and isotopic time-series of annual seasonality in temperature variations, similar to tooth enamel and other accretionary skeletal phases such as corals or wood. On two bone fragments from sympatric dinosaurs with different histologic patterns of bone growth, high-resolution oxygen isotope profiles were analyzed along the radial direction of bone growth. The investigated specimens are from the Jurassic Shishugou Formation in the Junggar Basin, NW China and have distinct patterns of compositional variation. A fibrolamellar dinosaur bone with multiple lines of arrested growth (LAGs) and periodic growth cycles of decreasing bone laminae thickness displays a cyclic intra-bone variation in δ18O values of about 2‰ corresponding with the LAGs. These growth cycles in fast-growing fibrolamellar bone provide evidence for seasonal growth of dinosaurs in lower latitudes (∼45°N), possibly influenced by a monsoon-type paleoclimate. Seasonal changes in temperature and water supply are consistent with the oxygen isotope composition measured in dinosaur bone phosphate as well as with growth rings in contemporaneous fossil conifer wood from the same locality. In contrast, a plexiform sympatric sauropod bone displays continuous growth, free of LAGs and has a lower intra-bone variation of ≤0.8‰. Differences in bone histology are also reflected in the oxygen isotopic composition and its intra-bone variability, indicating different physiological responses to external climatic stress between sympatric dinosaur species. Seasonal intra-bone oxygen isotope variations combined with bone histology may thus yield new insights into species-specific response to climatic stress and its influence on dinosaur growth, formation of growth marks, growth rates, as well as dinosaur thermophysiology.
dc.subject Dinosaur bone
dc.subject Oxygen isotopes
dc.subject Histology
dc.subject Climate
dc.subject Growth
dc.subject Diagenesis
dc.title PALEOBIOLOGY AND SKELETOCHRONOLOGY OF JURASSIC DINOSAURS: IMPLICATIONS FROM THE HISTOLOGY AND OXYGEN ISOTOPE COMPOSITIONS OF BONES
dc.type Статья
dc.subject.age Mesozoic::Jurassic
dc.subject.age Мезозой::Юрская ru


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