Browsing by Author "Jin, Xingsheng"
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Item Fossil turtle eggs from the Upper Cretaceous Gaogou Formation, Xiaguan-Gaoqiu Basin, Neixiang County, Henan Province, China: Interpretation of the transformation from aragonite to calcite in fossil turtle eggshell(Elsevier BV, 2022-06) Xu, Li; Xie, Junfang; Zhang, Shukang; Choi, Seung; Kim, Noe-Heon; Gao, Diansong; Jin, Xingsheng; Jia, Songhai; Gao, YongliIn 2007, a clutch of approximately 30 fossil eggs reported from the Upper Cretaceous Gaogou Formation, Xiaguan-Gaoqiu Basin, Neixiang County, Henan Province, China was assigned to the oofamily “Crocodiloolithidae”. After 11 years, another clutch of 15 eggs of the same type associated with Mosaiceratops azumai and from the same county was identified as turtle eggs (Testudoolithus), based on the needle-like crystals interpreted as aragonite from their eggshells. Our detailed study of the clutch of 15 eggs and six clutches of the same ootaxon using transmitted/polarized light microscope, followed by scanning electron microscope observations combined with electron backscatter diffraction analysis showed that their eggshells are dominated by secondary calcite; with a few pristine aragonite crystals that unequivocally support the turtle affinity of the eggs. Furthermore, superimposed cone-shaped structural units with radial ultrastructures, combined with the extremely thick eggshell challenges the assignment to the oogenus Testudoolithus. Hence, we suggest that this ootaxon could represent a new oogenus of Testudoolithidae. Although additional eggshell units were reported in the abnormal fossil turtle egg with multilayered eggshell from the Judith River Formation in Montana, U.S.A, the relatively constant eggshell thickness indicates that the eggs from Neixiang are not pathological. Therefore, this is the first report of superimposed structural units inside normal turtle eggshells, revealing the unique eggshell formation mechanism of the extinct turtle from Neixiang. Moreover, the aragonite discovered in the eggs may extend the temporal record of confirmed aragonite in turtle eggs. The crystallographic comparison between the eggs from Neixiang and the fossil turtle eggshells from Zhejiang Province and Montana revealed the transformation process from aragonite to calcite in fossil turtle eggshell.Item An oviraptorosaur adult-egg association from the Cretaceous of Jiangxi Province, China(2019-11) Jin, Xingsheng; Varricchio, David J.; Poust, Ashley W.; He, TaoWith abundant well-preserved clutches and several adult-clutch associations, oviraptorids provide some of the most detailed information on reproduction for dinosaurs. Here, we describe an oviraptorosaur closely associated with two eggs from the Upper Cretaceous Nanxiong Formation of Jiangxi Province, China, and discuss its implications for various reproductive hypotheses. The specimen consists of a partial skeleton (gastralia, pelvis, portions of both hind limbs, and tail), with one egg within the pelvic canal and the other just posterior to it, ventral to the anterior caudal vertebrae. Several geopetal features indicate that the individual came to rest on its left side, with the eggs likely extruded during buildup of abdominal gases during decomposition. Similarity of pubis, caudal vertebrae, and pes dimensions to recently described material from the formation, e.g., Tongtianlong and Jiangxisaurus, suggests oviraptorid affinities. The specimen provides additional association of elongatoolithid eggs and the oogenus Macroolithus with oviraptorosaurs and further evidence for monoautochronic ovulation, i.e., iterative laying of two eggs at daily or greater intervals. With each egg 36–48% the size predicted for a modern bird of the same adult mass, total egg production would be slightly lower to similar between this non-avian maniraptoran and Neornithes. Histological tissues and open neurocentral sutures indicate that this reproductively active individual was several years old but still growing at the time of death, a pattern observed in other non-avian maniraptorans. The complete absence of medullary bone in this egg-bearing individual may challenge the identification of this tissue in other dinosaurs more distantly related to birds.